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                    THE 2023

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December-January For GQ’s 2023 Men of the Year, see page 78. On Alia Bhatt: Blazer by Rimzim Dadu; top by Ura. ON THE COVER ON THE COVER ON THE COVER ON THE COVER THE 2023 ISSUE 0 2 G Q THE 2023 ISSUE THE 2023 ISSUE ALIA BHATT SUNNY DEOL SHAHID KAPOOR KARAN JOHAR Photograph by Avani Rai. Styled by Rahul Vijay. Blazer and shirt, Gaurav Gupta. Brooch, Beg Borrow Steal Studio. Photograph by Manasi Sawant. Styled by Gagan Oberoi. Jacket, Song For The Mute. Watch, Audemars Piguet. Sunglasses, Jacques Marie Mage. Photograph by Vaishnav Praveen. Styled by Selman Fazil, Chandani Mehta. Blazer and shirt, Helen Anthony. Photograph by Sahil Behal. Styled by Selman Fazil. Blazer, Dhruv Kapoor. Turtleneck and eyewear, his own. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 P H O T O G R A P H B Y A V A N I ST Y L I ST: R A H U L V I J AY. THE 2023 ISSUE R A I
For GQ’s 2023 Men of the Year, see page 74. On Rahul Mishra: Tuxedo, shirt, bow tie, and pocket square by Troy Costa; eyewear, his own. P H O T O G R A P H B Y A B H I S H E K B A L I D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 0 3
CONTENTS ST YLIST: SELMAN FAZIL. December-January For GQ’s 2023 Men of the Year, see page 92. On Ayushmann Khurrana: Coat, jumper, and trousers by Rohit Gandhi + Rahul Khanna. 0 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 P H O T O G R A P H B Y S A H I L B E H A L
ST YLIST: SELMAN FAZIL. For GQ’s 2023 Men of the Year, see page 96. On Prateek Sadhu: Blazer by Massimo Dutti; T-shirt, jeans, and sneakers, his own. P H O T O G R A P H B Y A B H I S H E K B A L I D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 0 5
CONTENTS ST YLIST: SELMAN FAZIL. December-January For GQ’s 2023 Men of the Year, see page 84. On Aditya Roy Kapur: Turtleneck by Zegna. 0 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 P H O T O G R A P H B Y M A N A S I S A W A N T
P H OTO G R A P H E D B Y TA R U N V I S H WA PHOTOS: BIKRAMJIT BOSE (OCTOBER 2018); TARUN KHIWAL (SEPTEMBER 2018); R BURMAN (FEBRUARY 2019); PRASAD NAIK (AUGUST 2019); ERRIKOS ANDREOU (OCTOBER 2019); TARUN VISHWA (MARCH 2019); ALL COURTESY OF GQ INDIA IT'S WHAT'S NEW NOW
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Toasting Time GQ Men of the Year event, way back in 2009, I decided to present the Lifetime Achievement award to Naseeruddin Shah. The legendary actor was fresh off the success of A Wednesday! When the time came to announce Naseer, I walked onto the stage, gave my speech, announced his name, shook his hand—and then walked away with the trophy! I had one job that day: to give him that trophy. But my nervousness got the better of me. Who hasn’t experienced something like this? We are all fallible. But what we can hope for is to do better the next time around. This 15th Men of the Year issue is filled with inspirational stories of individuals who have overcome adversity and failure, and—crucially—learnt how to manage success. When I congratulated MOTY 2023 honouree Sunny Deol on this year’s wholly unexpected monster hit Gadar 2, the 66-year-old star smiled and spoke ever so softly. “I’ve seen it all—highs, lows, people changing around me. And here I am again today— relaxed, easy.” Four decades after Deol first broke through with Betaab, and 22 years after the original Gadar, Deol’s latest success underscores the visceral connection that an older generation of actors continues to have with their audience. An emotional bond that is unique, rare and steadfast. What is equally unique, rare and steadfast is GQ Men of the Year’s 15-year partnership with Chivas—an association that was born with the India launch of the MOTY programme in 2009: to steward a relationship of this nature for a decade and a half, and find value for each other through changing times, platforms, and formats; to innovate rigorously, evolve, and challenge ourselves to push boundaries. All while operating with mutual respect, understanding and shared values. Congratulations to all involved, past and present. Here’s wishing you a safe and happy new year. SUNNY DEOL: MANASI SAWANT. AT THE VERY FIRST @chekurriengq 1 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 P H O T O G R A P H B Y N E H A C H A N D R A K A N T
WHAT A MAN'S GOT TO DO PHOTO: R BURMAN/GQ INDIA
The superstar rapper’s journey from Tadiwala Road to Times Square has been an eventful one, from weekend gigs in his home town to beefing with Indian hip-hop’s biggest stars to a season-winning performance on Bigg Boss. But through it all, MC Stan has kept his music at the forefront, setting his sights on building not just his rep, but an empire. B y B H A N U J K A P PA L streak that runs through MC Stan’s music and public persona, a tendency to zig when everyone else is zagging. In 2018, when Mumbai’s Divine and Emiway Bantai were absolutely dominating Indian hiphop, the Pune rapper came out swinging for the fences with “Samajh Meri Baat Ko”, taking potshots at both and igniting a redhot beef that simmers till this day. A couple of years later, when everyone in the game was rushing to replicate Migos’ triplet flow and bass-heavy beats, he took a leftfield turn into the mumble-and-autotune style of SoundCloud rap with “Snake”. The song earned him plenty of brickbats from the gatekeepers of Indian rap, but also 110 million views on YouTube and legions of adoring fans. His recent stint on season 16 of Bigg Boss oozed with so much “I don’t give a fuck” energy (including asking to be evicted multiple times) that regular fans flooded the Bigg Boss subreddit with threads complaining about him, digging up his past controversies in an effort to discredit him. But when the season ended, it was Stan HERE’S A CONTRARIAN T P H O T O G R A P H S S T Y L E D B Y B Y T I T O S E L M A N F A Z I L who walked away with the crown. MC Stan, it turns out, just cannot stop winning. “If you do anything, there will be some backlash,” he says when I bring up his haters, peering at me from behind a pair of dark shades, a massive gold rupee sign hanging off a chain around his neck. “You make one person happy, and someone else will get angry. It will happen regardless, so I’ve stopped caring about it.” To be fair, a bunch of angry people on the internet is small fry compared to the challenges that Stan—born as Altaf Tadavi—has already overcome in his short life. He grew up dirt poor in one of the 20-odd slums spread across Pune’s Tadiwala Road area, the son of a bus driver turned cop and a housewife. When he wasn’t in school, he spent most of his time out on the streets with his friends. “There was a tree that my friend’s dad had planted,” he remembers fondly. “We would hang out there and chill, eat some jamun, play street games like ghoda ghodi.”
Jacket and jeans KGL Sneakers, sunglasses, and jewellery His own
GQ World Music Such happy memories are at a premium when you grow up in Tadiwala Road, where urban poverty and gang violence reign supreme. As he grew older, he fell in with a group of friends who were up to no good. At night, they’d sneak out to steal petrol from parked vehicles for kicks (and presumably, pocket money). His friends would gang up on working class Bihari immigrants, essentially extorting money in the name of donations for Ganpati. Even his policeman father couldn’t keep Stan out of trouble. “People in my neighbourhood talk all the time about going to jail, because at least you’ll get three meals a day when you’re inside,” he says. “It wasn’t the thug life; it was fucked life.” of the few escapes he had from the misery around him. When he was 12, he got into qawwali music, performing songs like “Chadhta Suraj Dheere Dheere” and “Udd Jayega Ek Din Panchi” at local events. “These songs talk about mortality and what happens after you die, and those things wake you up,” he says. “When you’re young, you think you’re immortal. But that’s a delusion. Anyone can die anytime.” A couple of years later, his elder brother—a rare good influence on Stan—introduced him to the music of Eminem and 50 Cent. Their gritty, hard-edged representation of life in America’s violent inner cities resonated with Stan, who found solace in their shared lived experience. “The things they were rapping about are happening in my life,” he says. “It felt good to know that other people are also struggling with the same things. That I’m not alone.” Soon, he was writing his own songs, adopting the moniker MC Stan in tribute to Eminem’s iconic hit about an obsessed, mentally ill fan. In class 9, he shifted to a CBSE school, where the curriculum was much tougher than the SSC board schools he’d studied in until that point. He struggled to keep up, and ended up failing and being asked to repeat a year. Instead, he gave up on education, spending all his time on music instead. “I figured that I had already learnt everything that I needed to know, that would be useful in life,” he says. “From then on, the plan MUSIC BECAME ONE 1 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Blazer and trousers Rajesh Pratap Singh Boots Christian Louboutin T-shirt, sunglasses, and jewellery His own was music. I didn’t leave myself any backup options. I told myself that I wasn’t going to become a rapper. I was already one.” Stan began performing at parties for Nigerian students and expats in Pune, where a friend already had a gig. He’d earn `3,000 over a weekend of rapping, and spend that money on studio time and to finance his early music videos. The first song he recorded, an unreleased cut about Tadiwala Road street life called “Bhalti Public”, went viral in Pune’s small hip-hop scene, spreading via WhatsApp and Bluetooth transfers. Soon after came “Samajh Meri Baat Ko”, the diss track where he took on Emiway, after feeling like he was disrespected at a Mumbai cypher. Diss tracks—where artists verbally attack the rivals they’re feuding with—are a cornerstone of American hip-hop, but it was Stan who really brought that culture to Indian shores. “Samajh Meri Baat Ko” racked up nearly a million views, but it also incensed fans of Emiway Bantai and Divine. Not long after, his YouTube account got taken down. He started a new channel and re-uploaded the track, only for it to be taken down again. A few months later, Emiway took the bait, responding to Stan on his song “Kadak Ban”, kicking off a series of tit-for-tat releases. Stan
PHOTO: SIGNE VILSTRUP/VOGUE INDIA BEFORE IT’S IN FASHION, IT’S IN VOGUE!
GQ World Music dropped “Vata”, and then Emiway went nuclear on “Samajh Mein Aaya Kya”, taking aim at Stan, Divine, and former Mafia Mundeer Raftaar. Suddenly, it seemed like the whole scene was beefing with each other, an orgy of rhetorical violence. Outsiders looked on in amusement—and bemusement—and fans of the more established artists filled the comment sections on Stan’s videos with abuse and derogatory comments. But he didn’t care. He was doing serious numbers. “Khuja Mat”, his foul-mouthed scorchedearth rejoinder to “Samajh Mein Aaya Kya”, racked up 52 million views and established him as a name to reckon with. “Emiway did something I didn’t like, so I was messing with him. That’s basically it,” says Stan, quite taciturn about this phase of his career. Regardless, it turned out to be a shrewd business decision, keeping him in the headlines and significantly raising his profile. But with fame came other problems. People in his neighbourhood started threatening him, trying to pick fights in the hope that some of that glamour rubbed off on them too. “I’ve had people chasing me with swords and had to run for my life,” he says, attributing the violence to jealousy and the desperation of life in Tadiwala Road. “There have been many times when I just escaped death.” Stan’s friends too were getting deeper into trouble. He claims that he kept his hands clean, but his friends kept doing more and more of what he calls “gangsta shit”, bringing them to the attention of the local police. There was plenty of harassment by cops, even a charge sheet or two. Some of the strain he was under—and the second thoughts he was having about repping the “gangsta” life—can be heard on 2019’s “Astaghfirullah”, a song about asking Allah and his mother to forgive him for his sins. Rapping over a mournful woodwind sample, Stan dug deep for the lyrics, displaying an emotional vulnerability that was at odds with his in-your-face persona. The song earned him plenty of new fans, including rueful U-turns by many of his detractors. I N 2 0 2 0 , H E released his debut album Tadipaar, an autobiographical account of his exile from Pune to Mumbai, after he was implicated in an attempt-to-murder case. Over beats that blended Indian flute and traditional instrumentation with 808s and blown-out bass, Stan painted a grim portrait of life in Tadiwala Road, with gritty portrayals of police brutality and internecine violence. Hailed as one of the year’s best Indian rap albums, Tadipaar established 1 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
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GQ World Jacket KGL Vest Countrymade Jewellery His own 1 8 G Q “The plan was music. I didn’t leave myself any backup options. I told myself that I wasn’t going to become a rapper. I was already one.” —MC STAN D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Stan as not just a rapper par excellence, but also one of Indian hip-hop’s most innovative producers. He followed Tadipaar up with a string of experimental mumble-rap videos, channelling the work of Atlanta trailblazers Young Thug and Future. His 2022 sophomore album Insaan incorporated autotuned melodies and cinematic soundscapes, with lyrics that alternated between deep, dark confessions and bawdy braggadocio. The album’s 11 tracks paint a portrait of a supremely confident young man, but also a lonely one, licking the wounds left by those he loved and trusted. “If anyone tells me to trust them, I just walk away,” he tells me. “I have experienced plenty of betrayals in my life and my music. The word ‘trust’ doesn’t exist in my dictionary anymore.” There’s something deeply sad about that sentiment, but Stan has no time for self-pity. Late last year, when the producers of Bigg Boss approached him to take part in the 16th season of the show, he surprised many Indian hip-hop fans by saying yes. Stan says he saw it as an opportunity to spread knowledge about hip-hop, and change how people thought about rappers like him. “I wanted to show people that I’m a rapper, but I’m also just like you,” he says. “We’re normal people, we don’t just do gangsta shit all day. I’m an artist, not a gangster.” Despite the fact that he won, walking away with a new car and a cool `31 lakh, you get the sense that it wasn’t a great experience for Stan. “People like us can’t go on that show,” he says. “It’s for people who really want to be famous, they love getting exposure for a hundred days straight. But I’m quite camera-shy. So when I found out that the show is on for 24 hours on Voot, I got really anxious.” But he also acknowledges that Bigg Boss catapulted him to a level of fame that even he hadn’t imagined. He can no longer go to the kirana store to buy groceries without getting mobbed. Offers for big money partnerships and brand endorsements keep rolling in. Earlier this year, the boy from Tadiwala Road featured on a billboard in New York’s Times Square, to promote his single with Indian American producer KSHMR and New Delhi rapper-producer Phenom. He hints at even bigger collaborations to come on his upcoming album, though it’s too early to name names. He’s got big plans for his own record label Hindi Records, as well as two other businesses he’s in the process of bringing to the market. Like Jay-Z, Stan isn’t content to be a rap star, he also wants to be a business mogul, to build his own empire. “I’m all about making money, because people will only respect you if you have money,” he signs off. “I’ve seen it. I came from the bottom, and I saw how people treat you when you’re down. But now I have fame and money, and nobody messes with me anymore.” HAIR AND MAKE-UP: KINCHANGTHUI BARIAMTAK. MANAGING EDITOR: PRIYADARSHINI PAT WA. PRODUCTION: SHIVANJANA NIGAM, SHUBHR A SHUKL A. Music
PHOTO: ATHUL PRASAD/CONDÉ NAST TRAVELLER INDIA THE LAST WORD IN TRAVEL
40 Holiday Gifts for the Most Stylish Person You Know (You) B y YA N G -Y I G O H P H O T O G R A P H K E N Y O N B Y A N D E R S O N
GQ World Drops POPPY PURSE In his younger days, Pharrell Williams taught himself about luxury fashion by surveying the counterfeit wares hawked along Manhattan’s Canal Street. One of the first fakes he copped back then? The tubular Louis Vuitton Men’s Speedy bag, which he’s now revived in a slew of sizes and florid Canal-esque colourways: the first official drop of his reign as LV Men’s creative director. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 2 1
STUDDED SLIP-ONS By dotting the smooth suede outer with tiny gold baubles, Ernest W. Baker inflected the consummate prep loafer with a punk flair. RADIANT RECEPTACLES The wavy contours on Yew Yew’s jazzy, stackable glass ashtrays aren’t merely aesthetically pleasing— they’re designed to hold your joints in place between puffs. WAVY WALLET Your wallet should be efficient, yes—big enough to hold a few cards and some cash, slim enough to not bulge repulsively in your pocket—but that doesn’t mean it has to be boring. This swoopy, two-toned calfskin number from Ferragamo is right on the money. BLACKJACK BOMBER The playing card suits stitched on to the pockets of this Bode suede jacket might conjure gambling, but any fit you pair it with will be a guaranteed winner. FACIAL FURNITURE Give your living room a playful jolt via this MoMA Design Store oak side table, dreamed up by Singaporean designer Nathan Yong, which’ll keep a watchful eye on all your game nights and NFL Sundays. SMASH-HIT SCENT Ever wondered what Troye Sivan finds attractive? A spritz of Luca—the earthy fragrance from the pop star’s new lifestyle brand Tsu Lange Yor—should get you in the ballpark. “Luca,” Sivan recently told Vogue, “is so hot to me when I imagine anyone wearing it.” FLASHY FUR How do you make a sumptuous shearling coat feel even more opulent? If you’re Coach, you accent the shaggy exterior with a smooth leather collar that drapes alluringly across the shoulders. RIGHTEOUS ROLLIE With one of Hulken’s mammoth roller bags in tow—beloved by fashion-industry pros for their prodigious hauling capacity and utilitarian good looks— your laundry days and grocery runs won’t know what hit ’em. HARDY HOOD When the winter temps hit blistering lows, Chopova Lowena’s fiery fleece hood will keep your ears from freezing and your fits from failing. RADIANT WRIST CANDY Most onlookers will be taken aback by the 530 diamonds on this Bulgari stunner; true connoisseurs will be more smitten with the exposed movement. BLING BOOK Pharrell: Carbon, Pressure & Time: A Book of Jewels documents the polymath’s epic jewellery collection through interviews with the likes of Tyler, the Creator (Rizzoli New York). CRISP CARRYALL Freshened up in wintry white, Prada’s stalwart Brique crossbody is the handsomest way to ease yourself into carrying a handbag. 2 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N SOUPED-UP SNEAKERS These techy runners are riddled with shrewd details—fishnet uppers, crisscrossed soles—that only Bottega Veneta could deliver. 2 0 2 4 P H O T O G R A P H S B Y B O W E N F E R N I E P R E V I O U S PA G E : S E T D E S I G N , E LYS I A B E L I LO V E AT 1 1 T H H O U S E A G E N C Y. T H I S PA G E : R I Z ZO L I , E R I K I A N / C O U RT E SY O F R I Z ZO L I . PR ADA: COURTESY OF THE BR AND. ALL OTHER PHOTOGR APHS: BOWEN FERNIE. PROP ST YLIST: FIT Z FIT ZGER ALD AT MARK EDWARD INC. CHOMPIN’ CHOKER Not sure you can pull off grills? This toothy Medea necklace— plated in gold and platinum and riddled with gems—is a freaky next best.
PHOTO: JIGNESH JHAVERI/AD INDIA THE MOST BEAUTIFUL HOMES IN THE WORLD
TIDY TUX From the rakishly trim lapels to the hidden front placket, this Givenchy dinner jacket is about as clean and concise as black-tie attire can get . TWO-WAY TOTE This Loewe calfskin bag can house a carry-on’s worth of gear; fold in its geometric panels, however, and you’ve got a flat, compact package you can stash just about anywhere. GQ World Drops CHOPPY CHAIN The glossy sterling silver oozes pure Tiffany & Co. polish, but the jagged heavyweight links lend this necklace an edge you don’t typically find in the jeweller’s blue boxes. CRAGGY CERAMIC The rough-hewn surface of this handmade Editions Milano vase is meant to replicate the eroding effects of water and wind on rock. RIGHT-NOW NECKWEAR Juiced up with a shot of Moschino’s graphic chutzpah, the age-old floral tie suddenly feels brand new. GRIPPING GLASSES London upstart Kimeze’s architectural shades pair fine Italian craftsmanship with fresh shapes and vibey hues. CRISP CHRONOMETER With its complicated movement and platinum case, this Omega Globemaster Annual Calendar—made in an edition of 52—is an understated grail. LUSH LUGGAGE Rimowa’s aluminium trunks have long been the most covetable and luxurious suitcases on the planet. Now the German brand has upped the ante with a version stealthily coated in rich leather. TINY TICKER Teensy watches have never been hotter. Longines’s refreshed Mini DolceVita, with its Art Deco bracelet and less-than-an-inchwide case, is one of the absolute teensiest out. TRENDY TUPPERWARE Resolved to finally bring your own lunches to work in 2024? This Supreme Pyrex bowl set will help make meal prep feel a little bit cooler. SWERVY SNEAKERS Streetwear kids can’t get enough of Brain Dead and Oakley’s gorpy, sci-fi footwear collabs—and these chunky-sole wonders, with Mary Janes–esque exposed panels across the uppers, are easily the sickest kicks the duo have dropped yet. 2 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N TORQUED-UP TRUCKER Two iconic American outerwear styles—the rugged trucker jacket and the bodacious shearling coat—fused together with characteristic panache by Dior Men designer Kim Jones. DESIRABLE DEVICE Not since Steve Jobs announced the OG model in 2007 has a new iPhone felt as pulse-raisingly irresistible as Apple’s titanium 15 Pro. 2 0 2 4 SUPREME, EDITIONS MILANO, IPHONE: COURTESY OF THE BRANDS. FUNKY FLUTES Anna Karlin’s scenestealing glassware is blown entirely by hand in New York, so no two of the loopy stems are exactly alike.
PHOTO: TARUN KHIWAL/GQ INDIA LOOK SHARP. LIVE SMART.
BLAZING BAND Orange sapphires and brushed gold combine to make this 42 Suns eternity ring look every bit as scorching as the label’s name would suggest. TOASTY TOPPER A man can’t survive the winter on beanies alone. Let this cosy flannel Isabel Marant bucket liven up your headwear rotation. SHOWY SET Leave the ugly sweaters to everyone else— these jauntily striped 4SDesigns chore coat and trousers, tailored from a luminous cottonsilk blend, are the kind of festive dressing we can get behind. WARPED WATCH Fourteen years after their first linkup, Movado has tagged in pop art legend Kenny Scharf for another round of slick timepieces emblazoned with the painter’s twisted surrealist visions. COSMONAUT COAT Thom Browne’s signature flannel suiting tends to invoke buttoned-up 1950s office life; this gleaming down parka feels more akin to the retro-futuristic glamour of the spacecrazed ’60s. BRASH BUCKET Balenciaga Skiwear Collection teamed with Italian ski savants Briko on a helmet worthy of black diamond speed demons, luxing up the dome with an inky sheen and louche leather accents. 2 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 SHARP SPIRIT Nothing gets a holiday party jumping quite like a bottle of Lalo, the stylish tequila launched by the grandson of the actual Don Julio. FLUID FOOTWEAR New York’s Stòffa has earned a cult following for its soft tailoring and drapey knits, and this supple, Italian-crafted spin on the classic suede desert boot slides seamlessly into the label’s effortless universe. SPARKLY SHADES Most sunglasses shield you from blinding glare. T Henri’s oneof-one pair—encrusted with over 100 handset diamonds—actually creates it. MELLOW MULES Fashioned from realdeal calfhair, these Dries Van Noten house shoes are a sizable step-up from the fuzzy slippers your sister gave you for Christmas in 1995. MOVADO, BALENCIAGA: COURTESY OF THE BRANDS. 42 SUNS: COURTESY OF MR. PORTER. SUNNY SPEAKER In stark contrast to Saint Laurent Rive Droite’s dark, moody menswear, this splashproof rubber Bluetooth radio—a collaboration between the house and Lexon—radiates nothing but joy.
PHOTO: BIKRAMJIT BOSE/VOGUE INDIA BEFORE IT’S IN FASHION, IT’S IN VOGUE!
THE LAST WORD IN TRAVEL PHOTO: ATHUL PRASAD/CONDÉ NAST TRAVELLER INDIA
H A I R : E B O N Y L A DY LO C K Z W R I G H T. G R O O M I N G : J O S H U A M E E K I N S U S I N G D I O R B E AU T Y. TA I LO R I N G : A L B E RTO R I V E R A AT L A R S N O R D ST U D I O. RELAUNCH OF THE YEAR GQ World Drops Please allow the Migos rapper to formally reintroduce himself as, 10 years into his career, he bets it all on a solo breakout. By FRAZIER THARPE P H O T O G R A P H S B Y J U L I U S F R A Z E R S T Y L E D M O B O L A J I D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N B Y D A W O D U 2 0 2 4 G Q 2 9
T H I S PA G E Jacket and cardigan by Louis Vuitton Men’s. Shirt by Ferragamo. Pants by Alexander McQueen. Tie by Boss. Shoes by Valentino Garavani. Watch, earring, and bracelet, his own. Ring by David Yurman. GQ World Drops O F years ago, when Offset began work on what would become his new solo album, things didn’t exactly come easily. It took him almost two months to make a song he felt was even halfway decent. As far as creative dry spells go, that might sound brief, but to the Atlanta rapper, who pumped out hits as one-third of the rap group Migos— alongside Quavo and the late Takeoff— for over 10 years, it felt like an eternity. COUPLE A P R E V I O U S PA G E Vest and pants by Gucci. Boots by Christian Louboutin. Sunglasses by Akila. Watch and jewellery, his own. 3 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 He had just kicked his lean habit and, being done with codeine, instantly bettered his marriage, family life, business relationships. But progress in the studio was a different story. “I had a little creative block,” Offset says. “My own mind was telling me the lean was the potion.” It’s an understandable fear, considering what Offset accomplished while under that particular influence, like writing the hook to “Bad and Boujee”, which cemented his group’s rise to the stratosphere. So he prayed on it, realizing that tethering his God-given talent to drugs was just an excuse to indulge. He kept making music until he finally produced tracks worthy of his pedigree. Then he trashed those and went harder. The result is the recently released Set It Off. It could just as easily have been called Reset. That word, and synonyms like “reinvention” or “from scratch”, recurred often during the conversation I shared with Offset on a fall evening in New York. He’s inhaling joints and flicking the butts
“I didn’t do nothing similar,” Offset tells me when I ask if he wrote his own letter to himself, “but mentally I’m trying to take it all the way there and just show people that I’m an all-around star instead of just a rap star. That’s why I’m shooting my own videos. I’m doing my own merch designs, dancing in videos, dancing onstage with choreo and with dancers because I just want to do something that separates me from everybody.” This act of seizing total control stands in stark contrast to the taciturn, often monosyllabic Offset of the past, who ceded interview point guard duties to Quavo and seemed to approach his music with a light “if it ain’t broke” mentality. The switch up to go Michael mode came via inspiration from a contemporary artist: Tyler, the Creator, one of the last rappers you’d expect to find common ground with a Migo. “It was a year ago, at the Roc Nation Brunch, and I was telling [Tyler] my vision of being a standout artist and a solo artist and reinventing myself. I was glorifying him, telling him, ‘I respect how you stay in character [for each album],’ ” Offset recalls. “He was like, ‘You should do it, too. N-ggas ain’t going to fuck with it at first, but n-ggas never fuck with the good shit first. They always sleep on it, and then you show them throughout the process.’ I really took that shit to head.” ABOVE Coat, pants, and shoes by Ferragamo. Turtleneck by Uniqlo. Jewellery, his own. RIG HT Vest by Gucci. Sunglasses by Akila. Jewellery, his own. off a balcony as he tells me that he sees this project as a grand reintroduction. He’s palpably amped with excited energy. For at least a year now, Offset’s public attire has been deeply, unmistakably Michael Jackson–coded: white gloves, sequinned coats, varsity jackets with the curls, the works. But it’s deeper than one man’s dedicated homage to his favourite artist. This is Offset willing his own Jackson-5to-solo-superstar moment. Think of the outfits less as a costume and more of a character. “This character, it’s bold, a little selfish, a little arrogant, very confident, talking shit, and fearless to creativity,” Offset explains. These are all elements the brash rapper—once misconstrued, he says now, as “the rowdy Migo”—contains in earnest, but this is a specific cocktail created to embrace a mindset of pure showmanship. He cites the infamous letter that Michael wrote to himself in the late ’70s that predicts and promises all the career milestones he’d go on to achieve.
GQ World Drops Coat by Coach. Shirt and pants by Bottega Veneta. Belt and earrings, his own. Sunglasses by Gentle Monster. One would be forgiven for assuming the last year or two Offset has had—splitting from Migos’ home label QC, suffering the shocking death of Takeoff in 2022—would portend a darker project. Instead, Offset wanted to escape. “It’s way more fun,” he says of Set It Off. “I didn’t want to talk about tragedy and talk about….” He trails off. Talking about—or around— Takeoff ’s death last year is the only time Offset’s light dims. He breaks eye contact and fixes his gaze straight ahead as he forces the words out. “I ain’t ready to talk about that shit yet, first and foremost,” he says before admitting he doesn’t have the answers, yet. “I don’t know how to do it, but I didn’t want to just be making an album about bad shit, and dissing and putting that type of energy on the project, because it was going to make my mind be in a different place mentally.” He tried to make a song that dealt with the tragedy directly, a tribute. “The world is not ready for it, because [everyone] is so judgmental,” he explains. “They want you to make a song pouring your heart out that’s [also] a hit. There is a song on there that’s kind of expressing that shit, though, which is ‘Upside Down’. It’s feeling confident I’m going to go up with the music, but I’m down every day. It’s the challenge of trying to be the best at your worst times.” Earlier in 2023, Offset captioned a picture of himself on social media with the decidedly dark line “I’m cold hearted and unhealed.” Is the album’s outro title, “Healthy”, a sign that things are at least veering towards a better direction? “It’s like me talking to myself, because I ain’t used to doing [this] shit by myself. But it’s [me telling myself ] I’m still going to win.” A pronouncement, I point out, that’s not unlike those contained in a certain letter that his idol once wrote. Offset offers a different metaphor, telling me that he’s thinking about his life as a series of chapters in “a long book”. At this stage, we’re still early in the story, but the plot is shifting. “It’s like a reinvention,” he says, before smiling mischievously and making dead-on eye contact. “I can’t wait till you see the finished product.” FRAZIER THARPE associate editor. is GQ ’s senior
PHOTO: BIKRAMJIT BOSE/AD INDIA THE MOST BEAUTIFUL HOMES IN THE WORLD
THE 2023 GQ BREAKTHROUGH DESIGNER OF THE YEAR ABHISHEK SHARMA This year, fashion’s unfiltered freaky era met traditional menswear in a spectacular head-on collision. These are the designers, brands, and trends that rose above the rest in the sublime wreckage. 3 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Abhishek Sharma is one of India’s buzziest new designers. He has a flair for playing with contemporary textiles and silhouettes and turning them into visual delights. The Delhibased designer’s recent reef-inspired collection dived into the underwater world, interpreted through prints on men’s co-ord jacket sets and textures created by laser-cutting, couching, and adding embellishments dipped in the tones of coral, aqua, and shell white. Sharma is one to keep an eye on. —SALONI DHRUV
GQ World PHOTOGRAPHE BY SAHIL BEHAL Fashion Awards D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 3 5
GQ World Fashion Awards FASHION INNOVATOR OF THE YEAR RIMZIM DADU For her critically acclaimed show this year, Rimzim Dadu re-engineered the traditional patola weave with metallic cords, lace, and mesh to replicate the ripples of water. This extraordinary innovation was only the latest move by the Delhi-based designer, who has woven a niche for herself by experimenting with textiles, techniques, and form. Well known for recasting silhouettes by mixing materials like steel wire and cord, and turning them into structural saris, tuxedos, and bomber jackets, Dadu also opened up her first menswear store in Delhi earlier this year. — S . D . BEST COUTURE SHOW OF THE YEAR ANAMIKA KHANNA 3 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 MENSWEAR ICON OF THE YEAR ASHISH SONI For more than three decades, Ashish Soni has been one of India’s pre-eminent menswear designers, with a unique ability to see around corners while retaining a classic touch. Soni has had a busy year. His latest show was a retro take on dark academia; the collection combined suits with shoulder pads, checked jackets, velvet bell-bottoms, and plaid trench coats with playful floral and fruity prints, including bananas, oranges, and cherries on checked blazers. —S.D. PHOTOGRAPHS: COURTESY OF THE BRANDS “Love” was the underlying theme of Anamika Khanna’s couture show, with the designer converting the Durbar Hall at the Taj Palace, Delhi, into a mysterious space reminiscent of a dark, mossy forest. The collection itself fused heritage and modernity by mixing traditional textiles with layers of textures to create contemporary silhouettes in the celebrated designer’s signature egg-shell colour palette. Khanna also worked with her son Viraj, who is an artist, to transform his abstract works into patchwork jackets, capes, and bandhgala sets. — S . D .
INDIAN MENSWEAR SHOW OF THE YEAR KUNAL RAWAL LEFT IMAGE: PHOTOGRAPHY BY SAHIL BEHAL, RIGHT IMAGE: COURTESY OF THE BRAND Kunal Rawal is an eternal GQ favourite for his steadfast focus on high-quality menswear. In 2022 he won GQ India’s Designer of the Year award. This year, Rawal presented a collection that was a reflection of his 17-year journey as a designer, which included phulkari embroidered-corded bandhgala sets, plant-beaded kurtas, and tailcoat jackets that were styled together with tailored pants, lungis, and even flared bottoms, showing versatility without conforming to a particular gender. Nailed it again. — S . D . BEST STREETWEAR LABEL OF THE YEAR BLUORNG Amid the slew of streetwear labels cropping up across the country, Bluorng stands out. Pronounced “blue-orange”, it was founded by Delhi-based Siddhant Sabharwal and Mokam Singh during the pandemic. Since then, their accessible range of oversized T-shirts, 12-pocket cargo pants that can be turned into shorts, and mini rectangular leather sling bags have become a staple for hypebeasts. —S. D. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 3 7
GQ World Fashion Awards DESIGNER OF THE YEAR JONATHAN ANDERSON A N D E R S O N has our full attention. In 2023, the creative director of Loewe and JW Anderson set men’s fashion off on a bold, new trajectory by flexing his unique capacity for reinvention. At a moment when industry trends continued toward endlessly iterative products, Anderson instead revelled in the weirdness and comedy of clothing, and closed out a string of sensational runway shows by tapping into a beguiling and novel attitude for menswear. Anderson swept into his 10th year at Loewe—an unusually lengthy tenure these days—driven by the conviction that the fashion world is in dire need of fresh ideas. “There was a moment where fashion was really finding a new kind of ground,” he tells me recently. “Now, it’s become a bit jaded.” He likens what’s happening in the industry to a once-great television series that’s in the late-season doldrums. In fashion, he says, “I feel like we’re at this extended episode of something that made a lot of money and that we’re going to try to keep going—and then realize that the audience is no longer there for it.” Even the self-critical Anderson will allow that this year was rewarding and unexpected. His milestone spring-summer ’24 menswear show, he says, “will probably be in my top-five collections I’ve ever done”. He also dressed Rihanna for the Super Bowl half-time show and Beyoncé for her blockbuster world tour, costumed the forthcoming Luca Guadagnino film Queer, and collaborated with enough cultural luminaries to fill a crossword, including Roger Federer, Lynda Benglis, and Wellipets. “I always felt like he understands people who have a very clear vision, in a creative sense, and I think it’s because he has that,” the actor Josh O’Connor, a Loewe campaign fixture, tells me. It’s early October and I’m chatting with Anderson via Zoom from the JW Anderson studio in London. He’s dressed in an argyle knit from his most recent Loewe collection. Anderson has a bit of a phobia of wearing clothes of his own design, and practically never did until this year. “I’m very judgmental, I think, on everything,” he says. Why the change? “I’m turning 40 soon, so I’m kind of like, it’s now or never.” JONATHAN 3 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 The Northern Ireland native founded JW Anderson in 2008 at the age of 24, and made a name for himself in London with work that pioneered the gender deconstruction that now permeates culture. One collection, featuring ruffled leather shorts, was slammed by the Daily Mail. Like many of Anderson’s ahead-of-their-time designs, the shorts, he has said, were a hit. In 2013, the luxury conglomerate LVMH tapped him to turn around Loewe, a quiet Spanish leather goods house with 19thcentury roots that the group acquired in 1996. Back then, most people didn’t even know how to pronounce it. (It’s lo-weh-vay. O’Connor: “It definitely took me a whole year to get that down.”) Anderson arrived with a brave idea and a wrecking ball. “I wanted to try to work out: How do you eradicate the idea of luxury?” he says. He conceived of Loewe as a cultural brand, where concepts would come from outside the archives, driven by his insatiable appetite for art and craft and film and television and music. “I don’t know if you can even imagine what this man’s camera roll looks like,” says the actor Greta Lee, who appeared in a recent Loewe campaign. “It is like crawling into his brain. It’s exceptional. It’s image after image of painting, sculptures, colour studies, textures. It’s like a musical language that is so clearly innate.” As he found his voice at Loewe, Anderson’s collections were filled to the brim with references to the art and artists moving him in the moment, executed using artisanal craft techniques. One season, the creative brief for his design team was an image of an altarpiece by Pontormo. “I said, ‘You can only use this one image,’ ” he recalls. “Everything I do in both brands is a reflection of what I’m into. In real time.” P H O T O G R A P H B Y L A U R E N C E E L L I S
one of his addictions. “It’s not something that’s about optics for him, his proximity to art,” says the photographer Tyler Mitchell, a regular collaborator. “It really is profoundly his taste, his love, his obsessive need to be constantly collecting and in conversation with artists, creating new combinations through his work and other people’s work.” By 2021, it was apparent that Anderson’s idiosyncratic approach to running a heritage house was working. He had an It bag with the softly sculptural Puzzle, and celebrities like Frank Ocean in his front rows. LVMH does not disclose numbers, but Loewe, according to a 2022 article in The Cut, is thought to be a $1 billion brand. JW Anderson, too, was hitting a major hot streak. In 2020, when knitters on TikTok began trying to recreate a patchwork JW Anderson cardigan worn by Harry Styles, the brand put the pattern on its website. It felt like the single-most talked-about garment that year. Anderson’s work has a way of going viral but never stoops to gimmicks. “What Jonathan has is this bold, strong sensibility,” says the actor Taylor Russell, a Loewe P H OTO G R A P H S , F R O M L E F T: P E T E R W H I T E / G E T T Y I M A G E S , K U B A D A B R OW S K I / G E T T Y I M A G E S , I S I D O R E M O N TA G / G O R U N WAY.C O M , G E T T Y IMAGES, DARREN GERRISH/COURTESY OF LOEWE. ANDERSON CALLS BUYING ART ambassador. “And I think people want to feel challenged in what they look at now, and they want to feel creatively satiated and inspired, and that they’re questioning something possibly within themselves, too, and what they like.” As he grew more confident in his role, Anderson’s one-man war on boring fashion continued. Starting in 2021, Loewe became mind-bendingly strange, referencing surrealism in response to what Anderson calls the “abstract” moment of the lockdown. One collection featured grass sprouting out of sweaters and sneakers, alongside coats covered in iPads. “There has to be fun within it,” he says of these avant-garde showpieces. “My job is to ultimately make clothing for people for life. And in life, there needs to be humour.” This past June, Anderson once again seized the opportunity to pivot his approach with a collection firmly led by his superlative taste. At the Paris runway show for Loewe’s spring-summer ’24 collection, he made mischief out of the traditional American wardrobe, with models in button-downs, polos, and military jackets. But the waistbands of their khakis and jeans reached halfway up their torsos, as if you were looking at them through a fish-eye lens. Anderson loves designing clothing that, through exaggeration, suggests the idea of a character. “I find there is nearly more newness happening within attitude than there is within product itself,” he says. Elbows out, the models walked with a quiet determination. It was funny but also strangely profound, perfect for our anxious moment, thanks to a designer who deftly exploits the anxieties in menswear. It was, recalls Mitchell, “deeply playful and in touch with itself, which I think is a great gesture and [much-needed] space for men’s clothes and masculinity in general”. Going into his next decade, Anderson wants to keep springing new plot twists. “In a 10-year period, you can never just keep going,” he says. “There has to be this kind of wave. Because if it is just one lateral move, then you get really bored, the viewer becomes really bored, and then they already expect what the next episode is. So sometimes you have to let them have the next episode, and sometimes you don’t.” SAMUEL HINE is GQ ’s fashion writer. Anderson is known for humorous and striking showpieces. From left: Three looks from Loewe’s surrealism period; JW Anderson’s ruffle shorts; the epic high-waist trousers; Taylor Russell in a Loewe coat—or is it a sculpture? D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 3 9
MOST STYLISH PERSON OF THE YEAR Fashion Awards In the three years since Emma Corrin’s breakout performance as the eternally stylish Princess Diana in the fourth season of Netflix’s The Crown, the actor followed in Lady Di’s path, becoming a boundary-clearing British fashion darling—which, of course, Corrin achieved by punking the very notion of “boundaries” to begin with. Corrin thrives in the middle of every possible style Venn diagram: laddish and femme, 4 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N classic and playful, gamine and grungy. One of Corrin’s best experiments yet was the wheathued Ralph Lauren shorts suit with dapper brown derbies— expertly offset by a grown-out bleached blond buzz cut—that they wore to Wimbledon back in July. Pulling up to a famously stodgy occasion in one of the coolest outfits of the year is a feat of style worth celebrating. — E I L E E N CA RT T E R 2 0 2 4 When are classic British style moves—cardigans, blazers, big ol’ khakis—emblems of cool? When Corrin wears them. PHOTOGRAPHS, FROM LEFT: RICKY VIGIL M./GETTY IMAGES, JACOPO RAULE/GETTY IMAGES, DARREN GERRISH/GETTY IMAGES, FRANCO ORIGLIA/GET TY IMAGES, VICTOR BOYKO/GET TY IMAGES. EMMA CORRIN GQ World
Lemaire’s ultrachic clothing suggests a life surrounded by beautiful design and mindexpanding art. The brand’s store brings that world to distinct fruition. TREND OF THE YEAR: MADS MIKKELSEN, KRIST Y SPAROW; BRUNELLO CUCINELLI, JACOPO RAULE; DONALD GLOVER, TOMMASO BODDI; EDGAR R AMIREZ , DIMITRIOS K AMBOURIS. ALL: GE T T Y IMAGES. JEREMY STRONG: MACALL B. P OL AY/COURTESY OF HBO. STORE OF THE YEAR: CHRISTOPHE COËNON/COURTESY OF LEMAIRE (2). STORE OF THE YEAR LEMAIRE PARIS C R E A T I V E D I R E C T O R S Christophe Lemaire and Sarah-Linh Tran have established Lemaire as the go-to label for the kind of elegant, durable fashion that make creative, stylish folks go gaga. And now they have a flagship to shop at that is just as tasteful and tactile as the clothes. The boutique’s hand-cut Moroccan bejmat clay-tile floor and modernist wooden Enzo Mari furniture are TREND OF THE YEAR THE ITALIAN LOOK Yes, Succession had a lot to do with it. Kendall Roy’s never-ending procession of Loro Piana overcoats and Ermenegildo Zegna suits turned those elusive uppercrust labels into household names and minted “stealth wealth” and “quiet luxury” as the style buzzwords du jour. But there’s something else in the air that’s made the graceful, understated aesthetics of elite Italian houses like Zegna, LP, and Brunello Cucinelli stick around in the public consciousness worth the visit alone. Opened in March in the Marais, the two-floor, 3,680-square-foot store isn’t jam-packed with clothes—each rack is given its space. Shopping here is like taking a nice stroll, allowing you to notice things, whether it’s the details of the clothes or the hand-knotted rugs on the floor. and wardrobes of both actual and aspirant billionaires everywhere. After several years of freaky, off-the-wall, no-rules fashion dominating the streets, it was only a matter of time before something a touch more refined took hold again—and the soft tailoring, pleasing palettes, and exquisite textiles of Italy’s finest were there to fill the void. —YA N G -Y I G O H Mads Mikkelsen and Donald Glover looked rich and relaxed in Zegna; the harmonious cult of Brunello Cucinelli (centre left) gained a new member in Edgar Ramirez; Jeremy Strong (as Kendall Roy) turned Loro Piana into a household name. It’s bright and breezy and as pleasant as a quiet Parisian garden—a tranquil vibe for our frenetic world. — N O A H J O H N S O N
ASICS GEL-KAYANO 14 Last year, the Montreal design studio JJJJound dropped a collaborative spin on the Asics Gel-Kayano 14, a performance running shoe from 2008 whose techy design was suddenly a perfect match for the current sneaker climate. It sold out in seconds and still regularly moves for upwards of $500 (`40,000) on StockX. It wasn’t long before sneakerheads realized that JJJJound’s take on 4 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 the Gel-Kayano 14 wasn’t all that different from the widely available regular version. And Asics, of course, was all too happy to keep pumping the model out in a slew of sick colourways. Fast-forward to today, and metallic retro runners have emerged as the dominant kicks of the moment—and the Asics Gel-Kayano 14 still reigns supreme at the heart of it all. —Y. G . P H O T O G R A P H B Y B O W E N F E R N I E S E T D E S I G N : WAYO U T ST U D I O AT 1 1 T H H O U S E A G E N C Y. SNEAKER OF THE YEAR
GQ World A C C E S S O RY O F T H E Y E A R , F R O M L E F T: A L B E RT L . O RT E G A / G E T T Y I M A G E S ; R AY M O N D H A L L / G E T T Y I M A G E S ; I S I D O R E M O N TA G / G O R U N WAY.C O M ; GUS STEWART/GET T Y IMAGES; BACKGRID; LEON BENNET T/GET T Y IMAGES. SHOW OF THE YEAR, FROM LEF T: GIOVANNI GIANNONI/GET T Y IMAGES; AURELIEN MEUNIER/GETTY IMAGES. Fashion Awards SHOW OF THE YEAR LOUIS VUITTON inevitable that Pharrell Williams’s debut show as the new men’s creative director of Louis Vuitton would be one of the biggest fashion events of all time. He is, after all, the biggest celebrity to ever hold the top design position at a global luxury brand. But the spectacle on Paris’s historic Pont Neuf, the oldest-standing bridge over the River Seine, surpassed all expectations. The gold runway was lined with first-name-only MAYBE IT WAS ACCESSORY OF THE YEAR THE NECKTIE Neckties were everywhere this year. You saw them on fashion insiders on the streets of Paris, on club kids at damp New York parties, on your co-worker at the office on a random Tuesday morning. And unlike in times past, when it was all about your tie being the right width, now all conventions are out the door. These folks aren’t wearing ties only in deference to some antiquated formal tradition, they’re doing it because they want to—because it looks fly and feels uniquely novel in these very dressed-down times. —Y.G. celebs—Rocky and Rihanna, Jay and Beyoncé, Zendaya, LeBron, Kim. The collection was opulent and cool and full of surprises—including a stack of “Damouflage” trunks being hauled by a golf cart. And the party was lit. Hov himself performed a tribute to the new king of high fashion. With Pharrell onstage beside him, Hov told the crowd what they already knew: “This young man tonight did something extraordinary.” — N . J . Knotheads (from left): Billie Eilish, Offset, a Botter model, Phoebe Bridgers, A$AP Rocky, and Lil Uzi Vert.
LOOK OF THE YEAR PRADA S/S ’24 LOOK NO. 12 If Prada’s trendsetting history is any indication, the reporter vest—realized here in panama cotton—is about to be everywhere. You don’t have to be a wildlife photographer on safari to appreciate the glory of a vest bedecked in tactical pockets. But the sublime essence of this look from Prada designers Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons’s most recent collection is in the underlying simplicity—a crisp white shirt and pair of blue jeans. It’s an undefeated combo, elevated to the max by two of the great designers in fashion history. Here, in their own words, is what the designers had in mind: “We start with the white shirt—the most simple. And from that base, from a base of the most basic and normal, you can do whatever you like. It allows transformation, and individuality. Talking about bodies, you speak about individuals—the individuality of people, and therefore about an individuality of thinking.” —MIUCCIA PRADA These Japanese denim jeans, worn-in with a regular straight cut, speak to the designers’ sense of restraint. Mrs. Prada, who has long found style in ugliness, has practically singlehandedly brought the square-toe dress shoe back into fashion. These derbies in black brushed leather are quintessential Prada. PHOTOGRAPH: COURTESY OF PRADA. “We began everything from the idea of shirting, its structure, its lightness. We were thinking a lot about the body—to give freedom to the body, even if our interest is to show references to archetypes and architecture in fashion, which is usually restrictive. So we applied the structure to a whole spectrum of masculine garments, giving them all lightness, an ease and comfort.” — R A F S I M O N S Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons love to mess with ideas of formality. Paired with the vest and jeans, this white poplin maxi-cuff tuxedo shirt is completely recontextualized.
GQ World Fashion Awards MAVERICK OF THE YEAR JERRY LORENZO decade, Fear of God founder and creative director Jerry Lorenzo has steadily built an American luxury empire by playing his own game. No fashion shows, no FOG retail stores. Rather than abiding by the industry’s traditional seasonal churn, Lorenzo releases his collections when they’re ready— sometimes six months apart, sometimes years. He has resisted the lure of outside money, preferring to grow the brand himself, a business plan he compares to Nipsey Hussle’s “double up” mantra, and one that affords him complete creative freedom. “I’m not in this,” Lorenzo says, “to ever have to answer to someone else.” In April, for the brand’s 10th year, Lorenzo finally held a Fear of God runway show. An expensive landmark event at the Hollywood Bowl, it was the type of audacious production that might have given investors a heart attack. Thousands of fans pulled up, including Tinseltown heavyweights and regular customers who just love his hoodies. And practically every single person was draped in Fear of God’s comfy oversized blazers and fancy sweats, which have suddenly become the foundation of contemporary American style. The show was a total validation of Lorenzo’s unorthodox methods, a crystal-clear statement that drew the crowd to its feet. The self-taught designer founded the brand with a sense of deep conviction. He designed clothes of effortless sophistication for his own closet, which changed as his tastes did, from elevated streetwear to made-in-Italy tailoring. He launched the lowerpriced Essentials line, but didn’t dumb it down. It’s now a runaway commercial success, one that matches his lofty intentions: “How,” he asks, are these clothes “making the customer become the best version of who they are?” Lorenzo’s maverick spirit doesn’t take a backseat in big boardrooms either. He signed a deal with Adidas in 2020, and the first pieces of that long-anticipated collaboration finally hit the runway at the Bowl, and are just now rolling out. The wait was, of course, intentional. “I find my peace in the product,” he says. “There’s nothing else that’s directing us.” — S . H . PHOTOGRAPH: COURTESY OF FEAR OF GOD. FOR THE PAST D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 4 5
GQ World Fashion Awards WATCH OF THE YEAR TAG HEUER CARRERA 4 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N S E T D E S I G N : WAYO U T ST U D I O AT 1 1 T H H O U S E A G E N C Y. In 1963, the Carrera Chronograph entered the world as a watch for auto-racing enthusiasts with a taste for good design. This year, TAG Heuer celebrated the 60th anniversary of its flagship watch with a radical new design for the brand—the gorgeous Carrera Glassbox, with its internal bezel—and a major pop culture cameo, courtesy of Ryan Gosling as Ken in Barbie. At the same time, TAG released a suite of grail-level vintage models, like the yachtworthy Skipper and the Gold Carrera Chronograph, made after a watch that was beloved by Ferrari drivers in the ’70s, allowing the Carrera to assert itself as one of the all-time great sport watches. — C A M W O L F 2 0 2 4 P H O T O G R A P H B Y B O W E N F E R N I E

GQ World Style of 2023 4 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 KENDRICK LAMAR NYC, May While most attendees at the Met Gala took this year’s Karl Lagerfeld theme literally, sporting high collars, leather gloves, and big shades, Kendrick chose instead to bend it to his will. The Pulitzer Prize winner pulled up in a boxy Chanel leather jacket with a Chanel silk scarf tied around his waist— accented by the house’s double-C logo stitched on his fitted hat and encrusted in diamonds on his tooth—winning fashion’s biggest night handily in the process. DAVID CABRERA. From the picket line to the courtroom to the Super Bowl, the year’s finest fashion moments were all about uninhibited personal style—and the uncanny expression of artificial intelligence.
THE LAST WORD IN TRAVEL
GQ World Style DONALD GLOVER GWYNETH PALTROW LA, January Park City, March STEVE LACY AUSTIN BUTLER & KAIA GERBER LA, February LA, May This was the year of sick leather statement pieces. So leave it to drip lord Lacy to rock out at the Grammys in an all-leather Saint Laurent look, with a pair of stiletto-heel boots thrown in to make it clear the “Bad Habit” singer isn’t playing games. Not since JFK Jr. and Carolyn BessetteKennedy has a couple’s dog-walking style been so perfectly dialled. MALIA OBAMA LA, October “Nothing beats watching your children become smarter and cooler than you are,” Barack Obama told GQ US in 2015. Here, his eldest daughter—a writer in Hollywood— proves him absolutely correct. 5 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Paltrow remains undefeated when it comes to low-key luxury, even under the most unglamorous circumstances. In court this year for a trial related to a 2016 ski accident, the queen of quiet opulence was a vision of good taste in a flawlessly tailored blazer from The Row and a big bottle of Mountain Valley. ST E V E L ACY: F R A Z E R H A R R I S O N . D O N A L D G LOV E R : K E V I N M A ZU R. G W Y N E T H PA LT ROW : J E F F S W I N G E R. ALL: GET TY IMAGES. AUSTIN BUTLER AND KAIA GERBER, MALIA OBAMA: BACKGRID. Now this is how you do “creative black tie”. Glover strutted the Golden Globes red carpet in a louche satin robe and flowy matching trousers from Saint Laurent, with one of the Parisian label’s iconic wide-lapel dinner jackets adding the formal finish.
TYLER, THE CREATOR & PHARRELL WILLIAMS SANSHO SCOT T/BFA. Paris, June Two fashion iconoclasts and two generations of rap royalty. Tyler and Pharrell went to Paris and took a besties fit pic for the ages.
JUSTIN AND HAILEY BIEBER, K ATIE HOLMES: GE T T Y IMAGES. CILLIAN MURPHY: COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL PICTURES. JEREMY ALLEN WHITE, DANIEL DAY-LEWIS, A$AP ROCKY: BACKGRID. JAY-Z: KEVIN MA ZUR/GET T Y IMAGES. A.I. POPE FR ANCIS: IMAGE GENER ATED BY PABLO X AVIER. COLIN FARRELL: GE T T Y IMAGES. JEREMY STRONG: ANTONIO DE MASI FOR GQ. BAD BUNNY: FRONT, MIKE COPPOL A/GET T Y IMAGES; BACK, ANGEL A WEISS/GET T Y IMAGES. JAY-Z GQ World LA, February Style Nobody wears a tux better than Hov, and he looked especially debonair supporting Beyoncé at the Grammys in a shimmering silk two-piece, an enormous velvet bow tie, and a blinding Patek Philippe. A.I. POPE FRANCIS March The fabricated drip seen round the world: A Midjourneygenerated image of Pope Francis, the 86-year-old pontiff, wearing a swagged-out puffer jacket fooled social media users around the globe and kicked off a viral online discourse about the implications of artificial fit-telligence. JEREMY ALLEN WHITE LA, July White proves that when you’ve got bazookas for arms, no sleeves are necessary for an incandescent fit. KATIE HOLMES NYC, August CILLIAN MURPHY Oppenheimer As J. Robert Oppenheimer in Christopher Nolan’s historical epic, Murphy looked so damn dapper in his ’40s-era tailoring that it forced us to consider: Are fedoras actually good? 5 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Holmes is one of New York City’s great dressers. Who else could make a textbook errand-run ensemble—slouchy Alo Yoga sweatpants, white tube socks, and ubiquitous black Adidas Sambas— look this elegant?
JUSTIN & HAILEY BIEBER NYC, January The Biebers may notoriously dress most days like they’re headed to events on two different planets, but when their tastes do align— as was the case with this harmonious tonal-brown winter layering and his-and-hers oversized pants—it’s a cosmic couple’s-style event. A$AP ROCKY Phoenix, February As Rihanna rocked the Super Bowl halftime show, A$AP Rocky looked every bit the proud partner (and patriot) in a custom Jeff Hamilton NFL jacket, embroidered on the back with a graphic of his beloved’s tattooed hand holding a football. JEREMY STRONG Milan, June Artisanal fashion’s number one boy took his tastes to the Mediterranean, going full Loro Piana from his sneakers to the bucket hat at GQ’s Milan Fashion Week dinner. BAD BUNNY NYC, May Wearing a backless Jacquemus at the Met Gala, Bad Bunny reminded us that a full dorsal view is the menswear celebrity’s secret weapon. DANIEL DAY-LEWIS NYC, May Dressing like a deranged Gen Z mall rat was not on our bingo card this year for Day-Lewis. He may be retired from Hollywood, but the three-time Oscar winner is still getting off envelope-pushing fits—just of a very different order. Consider this distinctly post-swag ensemble: a Yoshimura-branded trucker hat, black Hokas, and butter yellow Swooshie pants from the Boston skate brand One Gig. COLIN FARRELL Los Angeles, July The picket line may not be the place to get a fit off, but the sleeveless Irishman caused a scene on the Hollywood streets during the SAG-AFTRA strikes in this kit. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 5 3
GQ World New Launch India now has some of the most exciting retail experiences in the world. B y S A L O N I D H R U V this era reflect more than just a retail experience; they provide brands an opportunity to tell a story. From travelling to an era of opulence in a heritage bungalow to sipping a cup of coffee while trying out the latest kicks, store experiences are increasingly being used by brands to engage, or even seduce, their customers in unique ways, moving away from the generic store formats of the past to something unexpected and exciting. Here’s a guide to the finest stores to open this year that are worth visiting. HYSICAL STORES IN
Louis Vuitton Jio World Plaza, Mumbai PHOTOGRAPHS: COURTESY OF THE BRANDS. Almost Gods Dhan Mill, Delhi What’s the vibe? Founder Dhruv Khurana draws from brutalist architecture characterized by minimalist construction and strips the space down to its bare bones. The exposed concrete and monochrome colour palette evoke a sense of intrigue and power, especially with the ginormous winged lion—an iteration of the Lion of Saint Mark, towering over you. What’s in stock? A gothic take on streetwear with prints inspired by the Renaissance period, Norse mythology, fourth-century medieval European mosaic, and Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man. Why visit? To dig through some one-ofa-kind streetwear pieces that double as wearable art. What’s the vibe? Louis Vuitton’s flagship India store occupying 7,500 square feet has been designed by architect Rooshad Shroff, who has balanced the maison’s global sensibilities with an injection of local design language. For instance, the wallpaper was handcrafted in Jaipur and developed by Shroff in collaboration with French textile and embroidery entrepreneur Maximiliano Modesti. What’s in stock? Accessories including crossbody and duffel bags, travel trunks, chunky silver statement jewellery, and sunglasses—including a pair of Virgil Abloh x Pharrell Williams “Millionaire” sunglasses. You’ll also find classic monogrammed LV trainers in multiple colourways, and the denim trainers originally designed by the late Virgil Abloh. Why visit? To hand-pick the flyest pieces from Pharrell Williams’s spring-summer 2024 collection, which is slated to arrive in March 2024. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 5 5
GQ World Antar-Agni Sarat Bose Road, Kolkata Gucci Jio World Plaza, Mumbai What’s the vibe? For his first flagship store in Kolkata, designer Ujjawal Dubey juxtaposes the old-world charm of the City of Joy with a 21st-century minimalist aesthetic, retaining the original mosaic tiles from the previous structure and contrasting them with an origami snake lamp that runs along the ceiling. What’s in stock? Jackets, shirts, kurtas, and trousers in nonconformist and ungendered silhouettes that have been synonymous with the brand since its inception a decade ago. Why visit? This store has a special madefor-Kolkata collection in moody monotones of black, white, and grey that you won’t find anywhere else. What’s the vibe? Spanning nearly 6,000 square feet, the brand’s fifth store in the country is part of the gleaming new Jio World Plaza. Geometry is the underlying theme that runs through the store with hand-painted wood flooring featuring decorative motifs drawn from the brand’s ready-to-wear collections and brass display racks that are inspired by oldschool bellboy trolleys. The store also has a separate walk-in salon for menswear with velvet armchairs and sofas that create a cosy living-room atmosphere. What’s in stock? An extensive selection of resortwear and fall-winter 2023 ready-to-wear collections for men and 5 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 women. Expect the spring-summer 2024 collection, designed by the brand’s new creative director Sabato De Sarno, to hit the shelves by March 2024. You’ll also find Gucci handbags, jewellery, travel gear, and home decor pieces at the store. Why visit? It’s the first time that the iconic Florentine label has brought in made-toorder and made-to-measure services for menswear in India, with the assurance of getting a custom-made outfit within a fortnight. PHOTOGRAPHS: COURTESY OF THE BRANDS. Antar-Agni’s new store in Kolkata has a minimalist aesthetic while preserving the old-world colonial vibe of the space. New Launch
Sabyasachi Horniman Circle, Mumbai SABYASACHI: PHOTOGR APH, BJÖRN WALL ANDER; INTERIORS AND OVER ALL CREATIVE DIRECTION, SABYASACHI MUKHER JEE. TARUN TAHILIANI: COURTESY OF THE BR AND. What’s the vibe? Stepping inside this 26,000-square-foot store in a heritage building located within the city’s historic precinct takes you back in time to an era of grandeur and opulence. Inspired by the romanticism of old Calcutta, the designer has reimagined this store as a museum housing objects of taste and beauty—from clothing and textiles to one-of-a-kind art pieces and artefacts. What’s in stock? Sabyasachi’s flagship store occupies an entire heritage building, where you’ll find the designer’s bridal and occasion wear on the ground Tarun Tahiliani Raja Ram Mohan Roy Road, Bengaluru What’s the vibe? The iconic designer teamed up with close friend and interior decorator Vinita Chaitanya to turn a heritage bungalow into a colonial cottage– style flagship store in Bengaluru. From the white exterior with rusty-orange monkey tops (domed roofs) to the interiors laced with embroidered wallpapers—dotted with hand-cut abalone and a smattering of Swarovski crystals— and the custom-made carpets crafted by Obeetee and designed by Tahiliani himself, the once-derelict mansion shows off the bohemianluxe identity that the designer is renowned for. What’s in stock? A selection of occasion wear for men and bridal attire for women, alongside a section curated for jewellery and accessories. Why visit? It’s a change from the glass-and-steel corporate aesthetic that can be seen across the city. The store offers a regal experience once you step into the opulent world of Tarun Tahiliani. floor, jewellery—ranging from fine to heritage pieces—on the first floor, while womenswear, menswear, his international ready-to-wear collections, and accessories occupy the rest. Why visit? Apart from clothes, every corner of the store is filled with art, antique furniture, silverware, and glassware, as well as rare lithographs, Mughal miniatures, vintage photographs, 19th-century Company paintings, over 150 works of art by the Sabyasachi Foundation, Canton vases, 18th-century Venetian handcrafted chairs, French art nouveau cabinets, over 3,000 books, 100 chandeliers, and 275 carpets.
GQ World New Launch Free Society Hauz Khas, New Delhi What’s the vibe? Modern and industrial, the store’s minimal grey aesthetic highlights the wall of holy grails. What’s in stock? Streetwear gems from Travis Scott’s merch label Cactus Jack, Drake’s lifestyle brand October’s Very Own (OVO), Justin Beiber’s clothing label Drew, and Learn to Forget—a clothing label established by musicians from Night Verses, The Adolescents, and Death by Stereo. Why visit? Apart from all-time favourites like Jordans and Air Maxes, their sneaker wall includes the LeBron James x Fruity Pebbles x Dunk Low collab, Lanvin curb sneakers, and Louis Vuitton’s monogram denim mules. Extra Butter Lower Parel, Mumbai What’s the vibe? Located in the fastevolving Worli–Lower Parel stretch, the brand’s first international outpost in Mumbai brings a bit of their NYC DNA with a clean and minimal aesthetic. What’s in stock? A wide range of kicks from New Balance, Asics, and Adidas. As well as streetwear gems from A Bathing Ape, Carhartt WIP, Dhruv Kapoor, Drôle de Monsieur, Gramicci, John Elliott, and Neighborhood. Why visit? One word: Sambas. Lots of them. You can also get your dose of caffeine while you shop there from their in-house cafe, curated by restaurateur Aditi Dugar’s TwentySeven Bakehouse. Mumbai welcomes two new streetwear multi-stores with Extra Butter (left) and Capsul (above). 5 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 What’s the vibe? Started by two ex-Puma employees, Bhavisha Dave and Meenakshi Singh, in Bengaluru in 2018, this marks the first extension of the multi-brand streetwear store outside the tech capital of India. The new store is also located—no surprises here—in Bandra. What’s in stock? Graphic T-shirts from Market, co-ord sets from Staple, iconic Thrasher hoodies and sweatshirts, triple-hem shorts from Bristol Studio, logo T-shirts from Champion, and accessories like skateboards, collectables, and even books and magazines from HUF, Icecream, Chinatown Market, and Ripndip. Why visit? It’s the place to find the latest fits from some of the coolest global streetwear brands, as well as home-grown heroes like Almost Gods, IMWIP, and Biskit. PHOTOGRAPHS: COURTESY OF THE BRANDS. Capsul Bandra, Mumbai
PHOTO: ASHISH SAHI/AD INDIA THE MOST BEAUTIFUL HOMES IN THE WORLD
GQ World Watch The Art of Space & Time Japanese artist Takashi Murakami speaks about his design for Hublot’s MP-15, a luminous, playful sapphire creation of his “smiling flower” motif—and also fills us in on his upcoming plans. B y S A L O N I D H R U V walks into the boardroom of the Raffles Hotel, a 136-year-old heritage bungalow turned hotel in Singapore, everyone is buzzing with the expectation that the Japanese artist will resemble his iconic smiling flower motif, which is eccentric, colourful, and to state the obvious, smiling. But the 61-year-old rushes in the room trailed by hushed tones and wearing a neutral outfit that echoes the essence of his latest collaboration with Hublot—a watch that recreates Murakami’s iconic flower motif with 12 petals made entirely of sapphire. Later, when I hold the watch in my hand, I examine its transparent contours. The floral shape of the limited-edition MP-15 is not just playful and quirky but also a luminous display of the Swiss luxury watchmaker’s craft, fusing the case, movement, and dial in a unique arrangement. Devoid of any colour, a challenge that got Murakami excited about exploring the idea of absolute transparency, the watch features a novel interpretation of the visual effects of sapphire. It is also Hublot’s first series-produced central flying tourbillon. Back in the boardroom, Murakami settles in front of a room full of journalists and fans before he shares his existential idea of time, leaving everyone amused. “When you go to an art museum, all the pieces hanging up have been made by dead people. My relationship with time is about making pieces for a future audience,” he says, switching between English and Japanese. For Murakami, the world is not in three dimensions, but is more of a multiverse. The storied founder and president of Kaikai Kiki— an art production company—confesses that he’s a physics geek with a keen interest in quantum mechanics, digging into the theories of the flow of time. When he’s not creating works of art or collaborating with cultural icons like Billie Eilish, Lewis Hamilton, or Kanye West, the artist spends his time watching YouTube videos that get into complex theories of the physics of time, space, and the universe. “I see time as not linear but multifaceted,” he says. “It makes me think how we can transcend all possibilities,” he explains, adding that his favourite movie is Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar—a film that explores time dilation when a crew of space explorers travel through a mysterious wormhole. According to the Japanese artist, the complexities of watchmaking are similar to the complexities of the universe. In a candid conversation, EFORE TAKASHI MURAKAMI B 6 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Murakami talks about what went into the process of creating this new watch, how he incorporates technology into his art, and his next collaborations. Hint: it involves a massive K-pop girl band. Your signature “smiling flower” is on the new MP-15 watch. What’s the origin of this now iconic motif? A recurring theme of traditional Japanese paintings are snow, the moon, and flowers, or flowers, birds, and the moon. It intrigued me that it’s always the natural elements and never any human beings. I realized that if I was to make it likeable for the West, I would need to make a human being the protagonist of my art. That’s why I added a face to the flower and it’s how it became my character. Earlier this year you released a dozen watches and NFTs in collaboration with Hublot. How is this collection different from the last one? Creating this new collection has been a dream come true for me. Before I even saw the watch in my own hands, there were so many things I wanted to say about it. But now after seeing it I am speechless. That can only happen when something is so wonderful and so beautiful that you are left with no words as the piece talks for itself. PHOTOGRAPHS: COURTESY OF THE BRAND. In your previous collection, you recreated the smiling flower using rubies, sapphires, amethysts, tsavorites, and topazes. What went into the watchmaking process this time around? When I first visited the Hublot factory, I was intrigued by the kind of machines they used and was impressed by the whole watchmaking process. I spent hours around these industrial machines, just watching the way they worked, so much so that everyone at the factory would be like: Hey, Takashi, hurry up! [Laughs.] This watch is more complicated in its design despite being compact. At first glance, people may not immediately recognize it as a watch—you may consider it as a piece of jewellery or an accessory. This watch has a very conceptual story that time is a fantasy and that everything is possible. When I wore it for the first time, it gave me a sense of zero gravity, it felt like magic. You’ve been associated with Hublot for a few years now. What drew you to the brand? It was mostly because of Miwa [Sakai, the president of the Asia Pacific region for Hublot]; she offered me the opportunity to collaborate many times. Her persistence made me say yes! [Laughs.] When Hublot first approached me, I refused the offer because I didn’t want to collaborate and produce a kind of “cover” design. That would have been very boring to me. When Miwa asked me to get onboard, she was able to guarantee that I was free to do whatever I wanted. I went to the Hublot factory in January 2019 and saw how impressive it was—the quality and the potential of it. Soon after that I met Ricardo [Guadalupe, CEO of Hublot] and we were able to accept the conditions of the partnership. That was about four years ago. Since then, everything has been done one step at a time as we wanted to collaborate on projects that were more complex, like this new watch, which shows what a good partnership can result in. “This watch has a very conceptual story that time is a fantasy and that everything is possible.” In your recent show in San Francisco, there have been references drawn from natural disasters and even the pandemic. How did the pandemic affect you as an artist? I had some tough times during the pandemic; my company was on the brink of bankruptcy, I couldn’t pay my taxes. But we managed to survive. During that time, we invited younger generations to the studio in a bid to get new and fresh ideas. It gave us this new lease of life. Left: Only 50 pieces are available of this limitededition watch. Above: The launch party at the Raffles Hotel in Singapore. Since the pandemic, technology has advanced to another level of sorts—artists and designers got on the bandwagon of NFTs and crypto currencies which have slowly died down. And now there’s an uproar about AI. As an artist, how have you incorporated modern technology in your art? About one and a half year ago, NFTs were very popular, especially in the art scene. Facebook became Meta, and everyone thought that the metaverse was going to be the talk of town. I truly believed in the metaverse and part of that is because I had a child who was 10 years old at the time and saw how he communicated online with all his gaming friends. That’s how significant the metaverse was and I felt that sometimes artists stick too much to their core values, which can be very uncompromising. I think you should always be ready for change, to adapt to it and fuse it with the style you’ve already acquired. I like the fusion of combining what I believe in with what’s on trend at the moment. You’ve collaborated with some of the biggest names in fashion and pop culture, including Louis Vuitton, Issey Miyake, Kanye West, Billie Eilish, and most recently, British F1 driver Lewis Hamilton. What’s the next thing you’re working on? My next project is with BLACKPINK. It’s refreshing to work with a K-pop band because this collaboration goes beyond the scope of a visual production, which is something I’m excited about. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 6 1
GQ World The Watch Party Rages On An emoji Rolex, a neon Blancpain, a Spider-Man Audemars Piguet: Old-school watchmakers are entering a wild new era. B y C A M W O L F T T H I S Y E A R ’ S edition of Watches and Wonders, the massive Geneva trade show where many of the world’s finest brands debut their novelties, nearly every conversation I had took the same detour: So, someone would lean in conspiratorially, what do you think of the Emoji Rolex? The watch, which adds positive affirmations and exclusive emojis to the Crown’s prestigious Day-Date, was so out of left field for the staid Rolex that many people reacted just as Max Büsser, founder of the Swiss luxury watchmaker MB&F, did on a recent call. “Did they all take acid?!” But it turned out that what’s officially known as the Puzzle Dial Day-Date was only the beginning of the watch industry’s new-vibes era. Even super-collectors like John Mayer are feeling the wave. As he recently told me, “We’re in a golden era of watches that I’m having a really fun time wearing.” Sometimes it can feel like appreciating the latest and greatest in the watch world requires a loupe, a fat history book, and a PhD in jargonology. But you don’t have to understand microscopic millimetre shifts to enjoy many of 2023’s best new releases. Audemars Piguet put its most talented designers to work A From left: H. Moser x MB&F Streamliner Pandamonium, Audemars Piguet x Marvel’s Royal Oak Concept Tourbillon Spider-Man, Blancpain x Swatch’s Scuba Fifty Fathoms Arctic Ocean, Oris’s ProPilot x Kermit Edition, the Hermès Slim d’Hermès Minuit au Faubourg, and Rolex’s Day-Date Puzzle Dial. 6 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 on a watch with Spider-Man on its open-worked dial; in addition to its emoji Day-Date, Rolex released a delightful confection of a watch titled Celebration. One of Hermès’s very limited editions features the house’s trademark horse in a cape and mask, moonlighting as a superhero. Blancpain and Swatch took inspiration from neon sea slugs, while Oris partnered with Kermit on a froggy green number. MB&F and H. Moser, for their part, collaborated on an elaborate chiming mechanism with a DJ’ing panda. Audemars Piguet is proof that fun doesn’t come at the expense of worldclass watchmaking. It takes a team of artisans 50 hours to complete the Spider-Man figurine of the watch, of which 250 were made. “At Audemars Piguet, we always say we are a serious brand, but we don’t take ourselves too seriously,” François-Henry Bennahmias, the company’s CEO, told me. “Watches should be fun!” Brands finding their fun side is a natural result of the watch industry’s massive growth over the past few years. Ruediger Albers, the US president of the international watch retailer Wempe Jewelers, credits a younger generation of enthusiasts with pushing watchmakers in this direction. According to Albers, this emerging new class of collectors likes to have “a watch that is aesthetically pleasing and not the one everybody else is wearing”. While many of these pieces are controversial among more conservative collectors, most have been immediate hits. AP sold out of Spider-Mans long ago, and Blancpain’s colourful take on its typically sombre diver had people lining up in droves. When the Rolex pieces were announced, Albers told me his phone “sounded like a pinball machine”. Those timepieces, in particular, immediately caught on with such influential collectors as John Mayer, Tom Brady, and Lionel Messi. “I am happy that [the makers] are taking a few more risks,” Büsser told me. “If you ask them, they will tell you they’re really shocked at how many pieces they actually sell.” As this new era of watches shows us, transcending mere functionality is liberating. I hardly bother to set my watches most of the time, let alone depend on them as a kitchen timer. This shift allows me to broaden the type of watches I collect. And many watchmakers themselves are now intent on not just helping collectors keep time but to totally reconsider it. As Philippe Delhotal, artistic director of Hermès’s watch division, explained to me, “Hermès watches offer a different interpretation of time: time that is full of fanciful touches, time that is friendly, lasting, playful, and recreational.” You might say they’ve found a higher purpose. Büsser put it more plainly: “We’re creating things that make a lot of people smile.” BALLOONS AND CONFE T TI: GE T T Y IMAGES. WATCHES: COURTESY OF THE BR ANDS. Watches
PHOTO: TARUN VISHWA/GQ INDIA WHAT A MAN’S GOT TO DO

Panjim-based writer, and dad to three boys, Vivek Menezes explores the dynamics of modern fatherhood. boys as beloved as can be, my wife and I assumed the next one would be a girl. Everyone expected it: our parents and siblings, the cross-cultural web of community that enfolds us in Goa, and every far-flung relative in our close-knit global families. It’s what I wanted most sincerely too, because a younger brother is my sole sibling and my mother only had three brothers, while my father is one of another five boys (with two sisters far outnumbered among them). When we were expecting again, this entire tide of heaving masculinity anticipated what we assumed was inevitable, which is when our youngest son emerged into the world. My first reaction was shock and disappointment, and then another unexpected jolt when my entire being seemingly involuntarily flooded with relief. I was hoping for a daughter, but that possibility had obviously caused some pent-up anxieties deep inside me, which disappeared like magic at the appearance of my son. A bit later, there was some guilt as well. Is the patriarchy alive in me as well? Am I part of the problem? Let’s face it, these are questions that no previous generation has been compelled to confront, but they’re unavoidable now that all of us have become painfully aware of the accumulated perils that accompany testosterone. The data is stark, copious, and undeniable: It is us guys who perpetrate almost all the violence in the world including 98 percent of murders. We man up—literally—the overwhelming majority of every lynch mob and hateful assault, wherever it happens on the planet, in an incredibly ugly track record that has justifiably turned contemporary discourse against our gender. The very language has soured as a result: paternalism, mansplaining, toxic masculinity. As a result, in many complex ways, this new paradigm of understanding poses an existential challenge to human civilization as we’ve practised it from the dawn of time, leaving men like me in an uneasy state of limbo. Patriarchy must fall, fully agreed, but how do we put that principle into action among the fathers and grandfathers we love, and the sons we’re responsible for raising into men? Make no mistake, I am not making any kind of plea for the boy child, let alone my own privileged progeny. We are all well aware that the simple fact of being male in India comes with unassailable advantages that are impossible to justify, and can never be reconciled TC H R E SD EI T P CA RG EE DS I: T I LCLRUESDTI RT A CT RI OE ND ,I TG EC TR TE YD I ITM CA RG E D S ;I TB C O RO EK D CI TO VCERRE DP IHTO T O G R A P H , C O U R T E S Y O F V I V E K M E N E Z E S . AFTER TWO BABY Above: Fathers and Sons by Russian author Ivan Turgenev was published in 1862. in comparison to what girls and women have to endure. The 2023 Global Gender Gap Report from the World Economic Forum, where India is ranked an abysmal 127 out of 146 nations, painfully delineates how women in this country eat far less than their husbands, brothers, and sons, and suffer greatly reduced access to education and employment (which has actually declined steeply even as the economy has supposedly expanded). Unicef reports that “globally girls have higher survival rates at birth, are more likely to be developmentally on track, and just as likely to participate in preschool, but India is the only large country where more girls die than boys [and are] also more likely to drop out of school”. All these urgent realities demand immediate redress, and we can all accept that the first step is awareness. Ironically however, turning on that light bulb results in considerable murkiness about the road ahead for men like me, with the responsibility of fathering three boys to thrive and prosper in our admittedly unequal world. Is there still anything at all that is useful, and relevant, about the way I was raised that remains essential to pass onwards to the burgeoning new generations? And, of course, what should be jettisoned entirely? Another more difficult question: How do I empower my sons to recognize and distrust the many different systems of discrimination that perch them atop by accident of birth, and then work to dismantle their own privileges, which they know perfectly well have been ostentatiously enjoyed by every previous male in our lineage? One important thing I’ve learned about fatherhood over nearly 25 years is some biological imperatives are simply impossible to control. For just one obvious example, I definitely want to be friends with my sons, and cherish that intermittent aspect of our relationships, but they also keep on butting heads with me relentlessly, and never cease measuring themselves against their old man in an utterly exhausting pattern of behaviour that is as old as time. That is why the annals of scripture and greatest works of literature are full of tragically bad dads—from Sophocles to Shakespeare, and on to Homer Simpson. What’s more, we all root for the kids, in the deeply embedded archetype that Freud summarizes most pithily: “A hero is a man who stands up manfully against his father and in the end victoriously overcomes him.” Is there any possible relief in this pattern? Can it be different for my sons, and their own children (God willing, let there be some girls in the next generation)? I think so, because my second big lesson from over two decades of 21st-century fatherhood is that they’re on the right track already. Far beyond any parental efforts or role models, my sons have become reflexive feminists of the new school because none of the young women they’re growing up with will tolerate anything different. We are all witness to how their ebullient generation of digital natives is being led by icons like Greta Thunberg and Malala Yousafzai, whose core values are fairness, equity, inclusion, collective empowerment, and the realistic possibility of paradigmatic change. Who wouldn’t be inspired by that? Which leads me to my ultimate conclusion, arrived at after much close observation of this Generation Z: The best path of action for guys like me is to generally get out of their way. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 6 5
“The world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.” P A T R I A R C H Y W A S assumed to be universal,” says Dr Alice Evans, the dynamic UK-based economist whose non-stop analysis about “10,000 years of patriarchy” is my favourite Twitter feed. She says that, “Until the 1960s, the social sciences were dominated by men, who typically ignored women. Grand claims went unchecked…. [The male position in most societies was] often attributed to biology and women’s confinement as care-givers. Susan Brownmiller emphasized worldwide male violence. Simone de Beauvoir proclaimed ‘This has always been a man’s world.’ Others like Marija Gimbutas posited ancient matriarchies and goddess worship.” But then, increasingly rapidly over the past 50 years, “as empirical studies burgeoned, assumptions of universal male dominance were debunked and discarded. Gender relations were increasingly shown to be globally heterogenous.” Evans trawls through mountains of data to reach some fascinating conclusions: “The Great Gender Divergence really occurred in the 20th century. While female seclusion persists in poor, patrilineal countries, gender revolutions have occurred in countries undergoing rapid job-creating economic growth, democratization, secular enlightenment, and feminist activism. For the first time in human history, women entered the labour market en masse, organized politically, and collectively eroded patriarchal dominance. “And yet, in every single country and company boardroom, men remain at the top. Their first mover advantage has been entrenched through 21st-century organizational practices (lucrative long hours and unaffordable childcare), homosocial schmoozing (between male bosses and juniors), and near impunity for sexual harassment. Since men are better able to capitalize on (high-paying) jobs with longer hours, they leapfrog up the corporate ladder, and then favour male cronies.” The bottom line: “Global progress is contingent upon job-creating economic growth and feminist activism.” Crystal clear as those conclusions appear—more jobs and freedom for all girls and women—they only address part of the problem. I’m fully down with that agenda, and you can be assured my sons are too, but what about the even more deleterious effects of toxic masculinity on ourselves? Is it now possible to parse my own privileges to reveal, understand, and perhaps rectify the wreckage within, so the same toll is not enacted “THE 6 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 from my still relatively undamaged boys? Here is where it gets uncomfortably real in ways I would much prefer to cover up: Our generational advantages are founded on gender and caste oppression amounting to slavery. Our “revered ancestors” exercised considerable cruelty in the unshakable belief that might makes right. For my part, I was relatively lucky my mother was different, but the voices around me definitely clamoured the familiar refrain that “boys don’t cry” with its inevitable corollary to “be a man”. Looking back, the way we grew up in 1970s’ Bombay was still comparatively gentle in contrast to the brutal ways of men that my brother and I would go on to encounter at high school and college in the US. We moved to Queens, New York, the same exact milieu that produced Donald Trump, where physical and verbal violence were standard rules of the road, and the only options were “suck it up” or become stereotyped as a “wimp”. School and college in Reagan’s America, followed by graduate school in Margaret Thatcher’s UK, was an entirely Darwinian exercise of both “kill or be killed” and “whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger”. The latter maxim turned out to be true for me, but at what cost? With how much time wasted? Is there no relief in the human condition from this pointless spear-waving? “The world is what it is,” wrote VS Naipaul in his classic novel A Bend in the River, “men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.” No one likes to hear it put quite that plainly, but the fact is the Nobelist’s line is often cited as an essential truth. Here’s what Barack Obama told The New York Times about it: “I always think about that line, and I think about his novels when I’m thinking about the hardness of the world sometimes, particularly in foreign policy, and I resist and fight against sometimes that very cynical, more realistic view of the world. And yet, there are times where it feels as if that may be true.” I share those sentiments somewhat, but we do have good reason to suspect any American president’s musings about “realistic” foreign policy because toxic bellicosity is an important part of their job description. Nonetheless, there is another possibility offered in what Abraham Lincoln aptly described as “the better angels of our nature”. Contra the implicit swagger of Naipaul and Obama, we actually make and remake the world THESE PAGES: BOOK COVER PHOTOGRAPH, SHUBHRA SHUKL A; VIVEK MENEZES AND SONS, COURTESY OF VIVEK MENEZES. —VS NAIPAUL
into different versions of what it is, and here the Jungian maxim applies in full: “One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.” Ignoring fear, insecurities, and negative emotions does nothing to change our lives, but acknowledging and understanding those inner shadows—integrating both the light and dark aspects of our individual psyches—does achieve wholeness and inner peace. The way I understand fatherhood is to encourage that probing self-awareness in my sons, and demonstrate it as much as possible in my own life. This too is deeply embedded in the human condition. Many years ago, while still in high school, I was moved by Ivan Turgenev’s magnificent 1862 novel Fathers and Sons, with its visceral portrayal of misunderstanding across generations in a time of great change just like ours. At that time, my sympathies lay with the sons (two self-defined “nihilists” bent on changing the world) but more recent readings revealed my more permanent position with piercing clarity: “Nikolai Petrovich was overtaken with melancholy thoughts. For the first time he realized clearly the distance between him and his son: he foresaw that every day it would grow wider and wider. In vain, then, had he spent whole days [reading] the newest books; in vain had he listened to the talk of the young men; in vain had he rejoiced in putting in his word too.” He concludes, like so many fathers have before and after him, “apart from all vanity, I do think myself that they are further from the truth than we are, though at the same time I feel there is something behind them we have not got, some superiority over us”. It is a hopeful direction. The kids are alright. Below: Rohan, Arjun, and Nayan Menezes with their dad at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi in 2009. Opposite page: A Bend in the River by VS Naipaul was published in 1979.
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Mercedes-Benz’s most pedigreed roadster returns with a new form, chassis, and intent. BY PARTH CHARAN grand tourer and, incidentally, a ’90s Bollywood movie fixture, the Mercedes-Benz SL now stands rapidly transformed. In fact, one look at its scowling face, teeth-baring grille, and razor-sharp air-intakes and it’s practically impossible to join the dots all the way back to the SL of 20 years ago, whose sole purpose was to breathe joy into long road trips in a way only a drop-top can. The kind that is accompanied by main character epiphanies and the forging of unbreakable bonds. From the Saab convertible in As Good As It Gets to the Goabound SL600 in Dil Chahta Hai—a plush, front-engined roadster can be quite an effective plot device. This is, however, the SL55 AMG—a V8-powered, Affalterbach-made sledgehammer of a grand tourer that’s part AMG GT lite and part Porsche 911 rival. It’s a big, fire-breathing, do-it-all, sub-supercar with massive flared wheel arches and styling so aggressive you don’t even have to look under the hood to find AMG’s fingerprints all over it; it is, after all, the first SL to be developed by AMG. Should you pop the hood—and you absolutely should—you’ll find a hand-built 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8. The kind that’s heading for extinction faster than the white rhino. Still, the SL55 AMG doesn’t signify a terminal point in Merc’s R&D, but rather a starting one. With an all-new aluminium monocoque and all-new underpinnings, it is one of the brand’s most contemporary supercars and will even share bits with the upcoming AMG GT. It’s hard not to approach this car with some trepidation. For starters, the now discontinued Mercedes-Benz S63 AMG has, for the longest time, been my favourite Mercedes-Benz grand tourer. It possessed the sheer jaw-dropping momentum of an AMG, without the overly stiff ride quality, henceforth referred to as “AMGitis”. All the drama, none of the drawbacks. On paper, the SL is still a more gentrified GT than the uncompromising, Nürburgring-bred AMG GT, but can it be as plush and comfort-oriented as the S63? Which side is it likely to lean towards? Then there’s the fact that I formed a digital relationship with the SL long before I actually drove one. The posh, V12-powered SL loomed large in the imagination of anyone born in the ’90s, especially those who grew up playing arcadestyle video games. Can this SL match the one that’s been nurtured by my imagination for over 20 years? None of those considerations seem to matter as soon as you put the roof down. This car oozes power and trackoriented mannerisms with every design element. The rear is compact and round with slender tail lamps and rip-snorting exhaust pipes singing the AMG anthem on full blast seconds after you’ve turned on the ignition. Headroom for miles and a V8 up front—this is the most winsome combination since cream cheese and bagels. Sure enough, the engine roars to life with all the drama and panache of an AMG. With two turbos, there’s pretty much no trace of lag, with the SL55 having been converted into a proper point-and-shoot device. The PHOTOGRAPHS: PARTH CHARAN. ONCE A GENTEEL real hero here is Merc’s nine-speed automatic gearbox, with its imperceptibly quick shifts. For a V8, a power output of 469bhp isn’t earth-shattering, considering this is a brand that can squeeze out over 400 horsepower from a four-cylinder engine. But it gives the SL enough power to make the performance exciting and not overwhelming. Internationally, there is an SL63 version that makes an extra 110bhp, but the Indian market only gets the top-spec SL55. What surprises me is how well-damped the suspension feels on our roads. Sure, some level of stiffness creeps in every now and then, but it isn’t symptomatic of AMGitis by any measure— the SL55 takes its touring duties very seriously, eagerly swallowing up miles like Pac-Man after a few edibles. Thanks to AMG’s influence, the SL has 4Matic all-wheel drive for the first time, along with rear-wheel steering, which allows you to power through curves on the road with total abandon. The interiors borrow bits from the Merc family, with a large vertical touchscreen in the centre that’s angled towards the driver to reduce reflections when the fabric roof is down. The steering wheel is sufficiently contoured and flat-bottomed to convey sportiness, but it isn’t the Alcantara-bathed affair that’s in the AMG GT. Think Ferrari Roma and you’re close. In fact the cabin is the most cosy and nurturing aspect of the new SL, with the S-Class-style, touchscreen-oriented, top-of-theline MBUX. This is a relatively button-free environment, with the fabric roof also opening and closing via the touchscreen. It’s an odd sensation, but it gets the job done, as long as you’re driving under 60kph. The SL55 AMG isn’t drop-top supercar theatre at its most dramatic, but it’s a car that lets you enjoy the moment, even at low speeds. From a post-war, gull-winged marvel of a racing car derivative to a prominent-nosed, V12-powered aristocrat, the SL has seen more drastic transformations than any continuously manufactured sub-brand in Merc’s history. As the first car to feature fuel-injection, it can be argued that the original 300SL Gullwing was the world’s first modern supercar, and although previous iterations weren’t developed from scratch by AMG, they did carry the AMG suffix accompanied by typically ballistic levels of power. So linear performance isn’t new to the SL. But the SL55 does a fine job of straddling the roles of easily tameable mile muncher and red-hot AMG. It may not possess the singularity of purpose like its predecessors, but it’s a far more wholesome GT as a result. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N The SL55’s V8 engine makes 700Nm of torque. 2 0 2 4 G Q 6 9
10th anniversary SPECIAL INDIA INDIA INDIA “IF I COULD, I WOULD ERASE THIS CONCRETE JUNGLE AND REPLACE IT WITH GREEN COVER” OCTOBER 2018 `200 MEN OF THE YEAR AWARDS SEPTEMBER 2018 `150 FEBRUARY 2019 `150 ALL NEW MENSWEAR NAWAZUDDIN SIDDIQUI PHOTOGRAPHED BY BIKRAMJIT BOSE INSIDE INDIA’S NIPPON CRAZE RANVEER VARUN DHAWAN PHOTOGRAPHED BY TARUN KHIWAL VA R U N D H AWA N NAWAZUDDIN SIDDIQUI EFFORTLESSLY COOL AC TO R O F T H E Y E A R CULTURE TRIP: WHY WOODSTOCK STILL MATTERS THE BEST WATCHES OF 2019 FOOTBALL FOCUS RAHEEM STERLING S H A H I D STRIKES OCTOBER 2019 `200 THE AQUA ISSUE “RAINWATER HARVESTING IS THE SOLUTION” Ayushmann ACTOR OF THE YEAR SUM THE FASHMER IO ISSUN E INDIA MARCH 2019 `15 0 P H OTO G R A P H E D B Y TA R U N V I S H WA AUGUST 2019 ` 150 MEN OF THE YEAR AWARDS 2019 INDIA AYUSHMANN KHURRANA PHOTOGRAPHED BY ERRIKOS ANDREOU PHOTOGRAPHED BY PRASAD NAIK PHOTOGRAPHED BY R BURMAN KAU KY VIC SHA P SHA L E TE F I H S R PHOTOS: BIKRAMJIT BOSE (OCTOBER 2018); TARUN KHIWAL (SEPTEMBER 2018); R BURMAN (FEBRUARY 2019); PRASAD NAIK (AUGUST 2019); ERRIKOS ANDREOU (OCTOBER 2019); TARUN VISHWA (MARCH 2019); ALL COURTESY OF GQ INDIA IT'S WHAT'S NEW NOW
For the past 15 years, GQ India’s Men of the Year programme has been a marker of individual achievement across industries and professions. The class of 2023 includes a three-time Grammy winning musician; a culinary wizard with an audacious plan to put Himalayan cooking on the global map; as well as a set of actors who have pushed boundaries, riveting audiences with their performances on screen. These winners not only reflect this country’s boundless creative talent and energy but also serve to inspire a new generation of Indians who are coming of age. PARTNERS
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH LEADING MAN At a time when the box office power of Hindi cinema’s legacy stars has been under scrutiny, Sunny Deol’s riposte is emphatic: delivering the most unexpected monster hit of the year. It has been exactly four decades since Deol first broke through with Betaab. What the incredible success of Gadar 2—which released an incredible 22 years after the original—underscores is the visceral connection that an older generation of actors continues to have with their audience. An emotional bond that is unique, rare, and steadfast. 7 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Suit and shirt Giorgio Armani
CELEBRATING Bundi, kurta, and trousers Rahul Mishra Watch and eyewear His own YEARS WITH
FASHION PERSONALITY Few have done more to put Indian fashion on the global map. By elevating local artisanship and placing it at the centre of his Paris haute couture collections, Rahul Mishra has won over some of the fashion world’s most discerning, influential individuals. Yet along with his renowned embroidery, what is equally impressive is Mishra’s progressive attitude towards the craftspeople he works with. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 7 5
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH
These pages: Tuxedo, shirt, bow tie, and pocket square Troy Costa Watch and eyewear His own D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 7 7
Suit Rimzim Dadu Top Ura
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT From being named Gucci’s first Indian global ambassador to foraying into the global arena with her first international Netflix project, and then delivering a stellar performance in the hit film Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani, 2023 has belonged to Alia Bhatt. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 7 9
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH ACTOR OF THE YEAR Throughout his career, Shahid Kapoor has embraced nuanced, morally grey characters—an impulse that is rare among stars, and one that has paid off handsomely. This year, he’s taken things up several notches: In the superhit series Farzi, Kapoor delivered the performance of his career—displaying both immaculate control and volcanic volatility— a breakout role that fittingly marks his 20 years in cinema. 8 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Blazer, shirt, and trousers Rohit Gandhi + Rahul Khanna
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH CHIVAS GLASSWARE PRESENTS GLOBAL INDIAN The towering Bengaluru-based musician and composer won his third Grammy Award in 2023, and was named a goodwill ambassador by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Earlier this year in London, Ricky Kej conducted the 100-member Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in a stirring rendition of the Indian national anthem on the occasion of our independence day. Kej’s growing body of work is consistently building Indian soft power across the globe. 8 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Suit, shirt, and tie His own
Coat Ashish Soni Turtleneck and trousers Hermès Sneakers Christian Louboutin
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH EXCELLENCE IN ACTING It’s been a strong year for Aditya Roy Kapur, one filled with praise for his double role in Gumraah, an intriguing whodunnit murder mystery. But it was in the hit streaming show The Night Manager that Kapur truly soared, cutting a distinctive figure as a vulnerable spy, delivering a powerful performance packed with action, drama, and an ill-fated romance. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 8 5
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH
Suit Ashish Soni Boots Hermès ← Jumper Zegna D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 8 7
Jacket Zara T-shirt and trousers Khanijo
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH CULTURAL FORCE Multi-hyphenate creative Reema Kagti helped create and deliver some of this year’s most high-impact cultural moments in the streaming arena: critically acclaimed Dahaad was the first Indian web series to premiere at Berlinale, and the follow-up season of Made in Heaven created buzz across the globe. Kagti’s professional partnership with Zoya Akhtar continues to be one of the most fruitful in the entertainment industry, with her work increasingly becoming a reflection of her personality: assertive and progressive. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 8 9
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH SPORTS LEGEND He is the torchbearer of an illustrious Indian tennis tradition that traces its line back to Ramanathan Krishnan. Remarkably, Rohan Bopanna is still going strong at the age of 43, with 2023 being his best year yet: He started as a runner-up in mixed doubles at the Australian Open, reached the men’s doubles semis at Wimbledon, and finished the Grand Slam circuit as men’s doubles runner-up at the US Open. Bopanna proves the adage: Age is just a number. 9 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Suit Selected Homme Jumper Polo Ralph Lauren available at The Collective Watch Omega
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH PROGRESSIVE POWERHOUSE Ever since he started in the business, Ayushmann Khurrana has been using cinema as a tool to kick-start and drive positive conversations around taboo subjects in a bid to reduce societal prejudice. In this year’s Dream Girl 2, the light-hearted narrative is layered with a serious message about cross-dressing and acceptance. That the film was a commercial success is yet another feather in the cap of this talented actor who, earlier this year, was also appointed a national ambassador for India by Unicef to support and enhance his advocacy work in the arena of children’s rights. 9 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Bandhgala and trousers Anamika Khanna
Coat, jumper, and trousers Rohit Gandhi + Rahul Khanna → Coat, waistcoat, and trousers Anamika Khanna 9 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH
CULINARY PIONEER
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH Apron, T-shirt, jeans, and sneakers His own D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 9 7
These pages: Blazer Massimo Dutti T-shirt, jeans, and sneakers His own Endowed with restless energy and searing ambition, 36-year-old Prateek Sadhu likes to take the road less travelled. The former executive chef of the path-breaking, critically acclaimed Masque in Mumbai, he has now risked it all by opening his own restaurant, Naar, nestled amid the Himalayan peaks near Kasauli. Like some of the world’s greatest restaurants—Mirazur and El Bulli come to mind—Sadhu has conceived his 18-seater as a global hotspot that will stand alone as a culinary destination. 9 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH
Jumpsuit Rajesh Pratap Singh Loafers Charles & Keith Earrings Radhika Agrawal 1 0 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH CHIVAS GLASSWARE PRESENTS CREATIVE MAVERICK She is one of India’s most talented film-makers, as displayed by “The Mirror”, widely considered the standout segment in Lust Stories 2. But Konkona Sen Sharma is equally gifted in front of the camera as well. The actor’s standout performance in the second season of Mumbai Diaries underscores not only her talent but also her commitment to using her craft as a tool for social reform. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 0 1
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH
Coat, waistcoat, and skirt Mannat Gupta Boots A&S Earrings Ishhaara ← Jumpsuit Rajesh Pratap Singh Earrings Radhika Agrawal D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 0 3
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR With Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani, Karan Johar delivered a critical and commercial success—a movie that stands to usher in a new era of mainstream Hindi cinema. In a single sweep, the director addressed issues of parochial patriarchy, body shaming, and male entitlement, while keeping an endearing, hilarious love story at the heart of it. All this while remaining arguably the most energetic, prolific individual in the Indian entertainment business. 1 0 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Jacket Loewe Turtleneck, eyewear, and jewellery His own
CELEBRATING YEARS WITH
Blazer Dhruv Kapoor Eyewear and jewellery His own ← Blazer Balenciaga Tie Tom Ford Shirt and eyewear His own
LEADING MAN SPORTS LEGEND At a time when the box office power of Hindi cinema’s legacy stars has been under scrutiny, Sunny Deol’s riposte is emphatic: delivering the most unexpected monster hit of the year. It has been exactly four decades since Deol first broke through with Betaab. What the incredible success of Gadar 2—which released an incredible 22 years after the original—underscores is the visceral connection that an older generation of actors continues to have with their audience. An emotional bond that is unique, rare, and steadfast. He is the torchbearer of an illustrious Indian tennis tradition that traces its line back to Ramanathan Krishnan. Remarkably, Rohan Bopanna is still going strong at the age of 43, with 2023 being his best year yet: He started as a runner-up in mixed doubles at the Australian Open, reached the men’s doubles semis at Wimbledon, and finished the Grand Slam circuit as men’s doubles runner-up at the US Open. Bopanna proves the adage: Age is just a number. SUNNY DEOL ROHAN BOPANNA PHOTOGRAPH: MANASI SAWANT STYLING: GAGAN OBEROI HAIR: ALFAHAD FROM TEAM AALIM HAKIM MAKE-UP: HEMANT ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA CONSULTING EDITOR: PRIYADARSHINI PATWA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHRA SHUKLA PHOTOGRAPHS: NEHA CHANDRAKANT STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL HAIR AND MAKE-UP: ANURADHA RAMAN ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: SHUBHRA SHUKLA PROGRESSIVE POWERHOUSE Ever since he started in the business, Ayushmann Khurrana has been using cinema as a tool to kick-start and drive positive conversations around taboo subjects in a bid to reduce societal prejudice. In this year’s Dream Girl 2, the light-hearted narrative is layered with a serious message about cross-dressing and acceptance. That the film was a commercial success is yet another feather in the cap of this talented actor who, earlier this year, was also appointed a national ambassador for India by Unicef to support and enhance his advocacy work in the arena of children’s rights. FASHION PERSONALITY Few have done more to put Indian fashion on the global map. By elevating local artisanship and placing it at the centre of his Paris haute couture collections, Rahul Mishra has won over some of the fashion world’s most discerning, influential individuals. Yet along with his renowned embroidery, what is equally impressive is Mishra’s progressive attitude towards the craftspeople he works with. AYUSHMANN KHURRANA PHOTOGRAPHS: SAHIL BEHAL STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL HAIR: MOHD JAVED MAKE-UP: SANJAY YADAV ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHRA SHUKLA RAHUL MISHRA PHOTOGRAPHS: ABHISHEK BALI HAIR AND MAKE-UP: SONAM KAPOOR ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: SHUBHRA SHUKLA CELEBRATING YEARS WITH OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT From being named Gucci’s first Indian global ambassador to foraying into the global arena with her first international Netflix project, and then delivering a stellar performance in the hit film Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani, 2023 has belonged to Alia Bhatt. CULINARY PIONEER ALIA BHATT PRATEEK SADHU PHOTOGRAPH: AVANI RAI STYLING: RAHUL VIJAY HAIR: AMIT THAKUR MAKE-UP: PUNEET SAINI ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA CONSULTING EDITOR: PRIYADARSHINI PATWA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHIVANJANA NIGAM, SHUBHRA SHUKLA PHOTOGRAPHS: ABHISHEK BALI STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: SHUBHRA SHUKLA EXCELLENCE IN ACTING CREATIVE MAVERICK ACTOR OF THE YEAR It’s been a strong year for Aditya Roy Kapur, one filled with praise for his double role in Gumraah, an intriguing whodunnit murder mystery. But it was in the hit streaming show The Night Manager that Kapur truly soared, cutting a distinctive figure as a vulnerable spy, delivering a powerful performance packed with action, drama, and an ill-fated romance. She is one of India’s most talented film-makers, as displayed by “The Mirror”, widely considered the standout segment in Lust Stories 2. But Konkona Sen Sharma is equally gifted in front of the camera as well. The actor’s standout performance in the second season of Mumbai Diaries underscores not only her talent but also her commitment to using her craft as a tool for social reform. Throughout his career, Shahid Kapoor has embraced nuanced, morally grey characters—an impulse that is rare among stars, and one that has paid off handsomely. This year, he’s taken things up several notches: In the superhit series Farzi, Kapoor delivered the performance of his career—displaying both immaculate control and volcanic volatility— a breakout role that fittingly marks his 20 years in cinema. ADITYA ROY KAPUR SHAHID KAPOOR PHOTOGRAPH: VAISHNAV PRAVEEN STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL, CHANDANI MEHTA HAIR: SHAHRUKH FROM TEAM AALIM HAKIM MAKE-UP: GLADWIN JAMES ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHRA SHUKLA PHOTOGRAPHS: MANASI SAWANT STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL HAIR: RAGHU FROM TEAM AALIM HAKIM MAKE-UP: STEPHEN ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHRA SHUKLA CULTURAL FORCE GLOBAL INDIAN Multi-hyphenate creative Reema Kagti helped create and deliver some of this year’s most high-impact cultural moments in the streaming arena: critically acclaimed Dahaad was the first Indian web series to premiere at Berlinale, and the follow-up season of Made in Heaven created buzz across the globe. Kagti’s professional partnership with Zoya Akhtar continues to be one of the most fruitful in the entertainment industry, with her work increasingly becoming a reflection of her personality: assertive and progressive. KONKONA SEN SHARMA PHOTOGRAPHS: MANASI SAWANT STYLING: DAMINI DAS HAIR AND MAKE-UP: SAHER GANDHI ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA CONSULTING EDITOR: PRIYADARSHINI PATWA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHRA SHUKLA DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR With Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani, Karan Johar delivered a critical and commercial success—a movie that stands to usher in a new era of mainstream Hindi cinema. In a single sweep, the director addressed issues of parochial patriarchy, body shaming, and male entitlement, while keeping an endearing, hilarious love story at the heart of it. All this while remaining arguably the most energetic, prolific individual in the Indian entertainment business. The towering Bengaluru-based musician and composer won his third Grammy Award in 2023, and was named a goodwill ambassador by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Earlier this year in London, Ricky Kej conducted the 100-member Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in a stirring rendition of the Indian national anthem on the occasion of our independence day. Kej’s growing body of work is consistently building Indian soft power across the globe. RICKY KEJ PHOTOGRAPH: MANASI SAWANT STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL HAIR AND MAKE-UP: APOORVA AGNES ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: SHUBHRA SHUKLA REEMA KAGTI KARAN JOHAR PHOTOGRAPH: SAHIL BEHAL STYLING: BHAWNA SHARMA FASHION ASSISTANT: NAISHA SINGHVI HAIR: SUNITA PAL (BBLUNT) MAKE-UP: ANISHA CHAWLA ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: SHUBHRA SHUKLA PHOTOGRAPHS: SAHIL BEHAL STYLING: SELMAN FAZIL HAIR: AALIM HAKIM MAKE-UP: PARESH KALGUTKAR ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHRA SHUKLA
PHOTO: BIKRAMJIT BOSE/AD INDIA THE MOST BEAUTIFUL HOMES IN THE WORLD

Garden City. Cantonment town. Epicentre of global tech. Bengaluru has been called many things, but never an art hotspot. That’s quickly changing as the city unleashes a new creative impetus that matches its energy and ambition. OPPOSITE PAGE: PHOTOGRAPH, MIHIR SHAH. BY VIVEK MENEZES PHOTOGRAPHS BY MANISH MANSINH A curious paradox has reigned in Bengaluru since it began boiling with money after liberalization in 1991, and the famously bucolic “Garden City” became the epicentre of India’s globalization story. Now the fastest-growing city in the entire Asia-Pacific region, its population has tripled in the greatest urban economic boom in the subcontinent since 1947. Yet, even while defining the country’s future prospects in many different crucial areas, all that limitless ambition seemingly stopped short when it comes to art and culture, which continued to languish underinstitutionalized and incongruously informal. Now, all in a rush in the post-pandemic era, that too is being rapidly transformed, as a host of independent ventures are rising up to fill the vacuum. Trailblazing this bold new direction is the Museum of Art & Photography (MAP), which opened in February earlier this year, and has already galvanized the art world with its impressive tech-forward online and physical avatars. Intrigued by what it has achieved in just a few months, I recently visited MAP to better understand how this cultural start-up is navigating an expanding set of international ambitions alongside its home city’s rooted identity. “The native and the global are always in conflict in Bangalore, it is part of our evolution,” says Suresh Jayaram, an integral bridge figure between the colonial-era cantonment city and its 21stcentury ambitions, whose studio-gallery-residence 1Shanthiroad has functioned as an influential creative crossroads since he built it on family property in 2003. I have been an admirer since he attended the Goa Arts and Literature Festival many years ago— where I am a cocurator along with the Jnanpith Award winner Damodar Mauzo—and last year thoroughly enjoyed his self-published labour of love Bangalore’s Lalbagh: A Chronicle of the Garden and the City, which “grounds itself in local histories and presents”. The evening before venturing to MAP, we spent pleasant hours talking together in the shaded courtyard of 1Shanthiroad, which was hosting an excellent exhibition by Kapila Nahender, where the artist statement explained: “I have access to an eclectic iconography and various traditional practices, juxtaposed and living side by side in the Halasuru neighbourhood, and surrounding areas of Fraser Town and Shivajinagar where I live in Bengaluru. [They] inspire me to create works of art that afford a certain acceptance and ambiguity. It helps me in understanding this urban energy, its vibrant mishmash of a lovely, pulsating and hopeful way of life.” Perhaps more than anyone else in constantly shapeshifting Bengaluru, Jayaram has experienced the city’s diverse art scenes up close, and singularly embodies both its Kannadiga roots and 21st-century international networks. It is his life’s work and his life itself: 1Shanthiroad is home, where he extends “radical hospitality” to everyone who enters, in an intentionally disarming way of being that generates instant familiarity and friendship. This one-man lifeline for artists has made a huge difference all by himself, recounting that “the 1990s were unmistakably a paradigm shift, where Bangalore was caught in the global climb of IT, but this new economy was not reflected in the arts, and was more seen in rampant unplanned urban growth that changed the city and the mindset of people. The ‘art boom’ in Mumbai and Delhi hardly mattered to the local scene, which has diverse forms of regional modernism and subversive art and experimentation. My way of addressing this problem has been ‘solidarity economics’. A space with zero administrative and bureaucratic designs, which adapts in accordance to the possible. Over 20 years after it came into existence, 1Shanthiroad continues to present the ‘alternative’ as an institutional critique.” There is important context here, in the Indian art world’s ever-present existential anxieties following the shocking collapse of the still-nascent modern and contemporary art marketplace in 2008, followed by the consistent mismanagement of most of the D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 1 1
Top: Kanasu Kannadi (Dream Mirror), by Payana in collaboration with Maraa, Falana Films, and Joe Panicker, part of Visible/ Invisible: Representation of Women in Art Through the MAP Collection. Above left: Abhishek Poddar, founder of the Museum of Art & Photography (MAP). Above right: Kamini Sawhney, director of MAP. Opening pages: Suresh Jayaram (left), founder of 1ShanthiRoad; visitors at a digital exhibition at the Sasken Multimedia Gallery on the first floor of MAP. 1 1 2 G Q D E C country’s museums. Almost everything of value has withered disgracefully over the past decade, and while there’s still considerable hype it is not at all backed by numbers. The comparison to countries like China, which were exactly in the same place just one generation past, could not be more painfully stark. They have thousands of museums, and keep building more, while our few dozen crumble from neglect. Their collectors drive a huge portion of global trade, while ours don’t even add up to 0.5 per cent. Here in India, it’s a shameful fact that most people can’t ever see our own greatest masterpieces in person, with my home state the ultimate example. Vasudeo Gaitonde and Francis Newton Souza of the seminal Progressive Artists Group share deep ancestral roots in North Goan villages, but it’s impossible to see their paintings in their own homeland, in the depressing pattern of apathy and incompetence that characterizes attitudes towards the arts across the country. Things could turn around with Bengaluru leading the way, and spending time with Suresh Jayaram 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 to understand his milieu better was an important reminder that his hometown cannot easily be compared to Mumbai or Kolkata—or New York and London either—because this city on the move is still very evidently embroiled in becoming whatever it’s eventually going to be. Not only the start-up capital of the country—and perhaps even the world—it’s also very much itself a start-up, spilling over with millions of young migrants who are swiftly reprogramming what it means to be Indian even as they do the same to the apps on your mobile device. Here, the speed and scale of change is genuinely mind-boggling. A few years ago, I walked my young sons around Cubbon Park and pointed out Vijay Mallya’s colonial-era mansion, but this time I found that landmark was no longer on the ground. It has been hoisted atop an astonishing skyscraper over 30 storeys high, and crowned by a vast helipad. Hard by is another giant building with its own helipad, and in between these monuments to excess is MAP, which is comparatively modest in size, but references the same visual language of glass and steel. “Cubbon Park is the soul of this city,” said Suresh Jayaram, who was kind enough to walk me to MAP on the morning of my first visit. He told me his new book is about this lovely “public space that has changed down the years from being native farmland to a colonial garden to the most contested social, political, and cultural space that defines the city’s urban planning and concern for nature. It is not just a public park, but reflects dreams and aspirations about the city like the collective botanical diversity of the trees that grow there. It is part of the network of local and global transactions of human minds that work to nurture the cosmopolitan nature of this global city.” Many of the most important institutions of the city and state are here: the Karnataka High Court; the Seshadri Iyer Memorial Library; the Government Museum; and the Venkatappa Art Gallery. This is the storied cultural landscape onto which MAP opens its doors, directly across from the Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, in what is surely one of the most desirable locations in Bengaluru. From the moment I entered, it was clear this new institution is working hard on openness and accessibility, to live up to the mission statement outlined on its website: “At MAP we believe that art is for all and have a range of accessibility services and features to make your visit as seamless as possible. The Museum is designed with mobility in mind, with accessible parking, pathing and bathrooms for ease of access. We have also developed audio guides and tactile artworks for a holistic experience of our exhibitions.” This must be the first and most important principle for all art and culture start-ups in a country like India, as private entities joust to take the place of what the state should be doing, and equally impressive is the online emphasis via mapacademy.io, where huge resources are being made freely available. “The pandemic changed the way we approached
Below: The MAP team observing an artwork at the conservation lab—from left, Arnika Ahldag, head of exhibitions; Shilpa Vijayakrishnan, head of education and outreach; and Shibu Narayan, head of collections. our audiences,” says Kamini Sawhney, director of MAP, who previously headed the outstanding Jehangir Nicholson Art Foundation in Mumbai. I met this distinguished art world insider—she became the first-ever Indian elected to the International Committee for Museums and Collections of Modern Art board last year—at her light-filled office, surrounded by attractive open-plan suites, filled with young people (they seemed 80 per cent women) visibly engaged in their work assignments. She told me, “Our initial idea was to build a strong base within the community in Bengaluru, and then move outwards across the country and internationally. But the lockdown encouraged us to innovate, and reach out to audiences online. It turned things on their heads in a way, because we were connecting with people across the world alongside local audiences.” Now, there’s an equal emphasis on the physical: “If MAP is to have any impact in Bengaluru then it has to be relevant to the people in the city. It is only when the people who live here have a sense of ownership over the museum that it will become the vibrant cultural hub that we want it to be. Art has always flourished in different pockets in the city but what it has lacked are more formal institutions that provide organized experiences and points of contact and exchange. Along with other similar institutions like Bangalore International Centre, Indian Music Experience, and the [upcoming] Science Gallery, our plan is to work together to change that.” I noted many fascinating aspects to MAP on my visit, but one I did not expect was the conspicuous absence of the names of its founders: Abhishek and Radhika Poddar. Every major donor is listed on panels by the entrance except them, despite their spearheading and seeding the entire project from its contested genesis—when public outcry prevented the museum from being transplanted onto the public Venkatappa Gallery—and bringing in the great majority of the artworks in its permanent collection. It was both refreshing and surprising when Sawhney told me, “One man did buy these works, but they don’t belong to him. We believe they belong to the city and its people. Also, museum collections tend to be structured, but because this grew out of a collector’s passion, it wanders in all sorts of directions with often delightful O P P O S I T E PA G E : K A M I N I S AW H N E Y, O R A N G E & T E A L . “The lockdown encouraged us to innovate, and reach out to audiences online. We were connecting with people across the world alongside local audiences.” —KAMINI SAWHNEY
“We could have moved out of the city and built much more on far bigger land, but our goal was to be right here, and we want to have the same connection to the citizens as the Visvesvaraya museum right opposite our doors.” —ABHISHEK PODDAR Left: Gurjeet Singh, Sile Bolna (Stitched Lips), 2022. Top left: Indu Antony, Uncle had Hairy Legs (Vincent Uncle series), 2017. Top right: The head of conservation Rajeev Kumar Choudhary with the team of conservators and restorers. Above right: Visitors at MAP. 1 1 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 surprises. I often say MAP’s collection is a curator’s delight even if it can be an archivist’s nightmare, including premodern, modern, and contemporary art, textiles, indigenous art, photography, and popular culture. It allows us to collapse the hierarchies between what is perceived as high and low art and draw interesting connections across the collection.” MAP is very good in several ways: It’s free to enter (although more signage to that effect would help to welcome more people) and you can explore some of its collection without paying anything. On its first floor, there is an ingenious interactive display on which you can mount any one of several collections on walls of screens, the first of its kind anywhere in the world; it struck me as an ideal example of art-related innovation that IT-forward Bengaluru can contribute for the rest of us (although, by contrast, the so-called virtual reality exhibition in the basement was sorely disappointing). There is an affordable cafe downstairs and a restaurant on the roof, as well as an unusually well-conceived merchandise collection in the museum shop. More than any other existing art institution in the rest of the country, this new venture struck me as having its act together, with a comprehensive vision that is likely to result in the broad-based achievement of its goals. “Our success is going to be determined solely by the people of Bangalore,” says Abhishek Poddar, “We could have moved out of the city and built much more on far bigger land for the same kind of money we have spent, but our goal was to be right here, and we
want to have the same connection to the citizens as the Visvesvaraya museum right opposite our doors.” Although we couldn’t meet at MAP, I was glad for a video call to discuss his ideas for the city he moved to from Kolkata just when the economic boom started to take hold 30 years ago. “I came to the Garden City just at the cusp of its change, and soon after my own journey in art had begun with gurus to show me the way like Martand Singh, Jyotindra Jain, BN Goswamy, and Dayanita Singh. It’s been an amazing journey of learning, and one that I am motivated to share. Bangalore somehow didn’t have the kind of museums that it needed, to instil pride and joy in Indian art amongst the majority of young people who live here. MAP was the right choice to address that,” he says. This long-time art buyer has collected some standout works that make his museum an instantly essential destination in which to view the best modern and contemporary Indian art. Among a few others, I was strongly drawn to Arpita Singh’s 1990 Devi Pistol Wali as well as Bhupen Khakhar’s baleful 1965 Devi. Poddar says, “When I began, it was more all over the place, as different people guided me, but these days it’s about what gives me joy. The most important question: Does the work make you pause and wonder? It has always amazed me, how art can take you back, make you think and savour the moment. What I’ve learned over the years is you don’t have to be an expert, but just listen carefully to those who are. When I’ve asked for help, I’ve always received it in abundance. That wonderful experience of sharing is what I want to help inculcate in the city and its residents. I want MAP to make a difference.” That might well happen, but at the moment MAP is a work in progress, exactly mirroring Bengaluru. There is much to admire in this supercharged South Indian city, as well as many problems including some of the world’s worst traffic. On my way out to the airport, I fought through the gridlock to make a final pit stop at Bengaluru Oota Company, which serves typical Gowda and Mangalorean fare, and earlier this year made an improbable leap into the top 50 restaurants in the country in the Condé Nast Traveller India rankings (for which I am one of many jurors). Here again is local and global, unpretentious but extraordinary, in yet another example of what the rest of the world can learn from and emulate, from what’s happening in the capital of Karnataka. To discuss that, I was happy to be joined by Raghava KK, whose own remarkable art journey maps that of his home city. A self-taught prodigy with deep roots in the old Bangalore, he’s now represented by the Dubai-based Volte Art Projects—along with global stars like William Kentridge and James Turrell—as “the embodiment of the new India’s global and digital aspirations”. Raghava and I spent our lunchtime discussing the contradictions and congruences in the sudden change of pace in the Bengaluru art world. He told me his home town “has always been open to change and new perspectives. Having seen no major adversity in terms of wars for many generations, the people of Karnataka are very laid-back, warm, and open-minded. They have the potential to imagine alternate realities, and transcend hegemonic practices.” But there’s also something important to consider here: “We should be seeing more experimental, more openminded and inclusive art coming out of Bangalore along with original solutions. Unfortunately, we as a nation do not value original thought and experimentation and would rather adopt successful models from the West and impose them on our people. Even venture capital has a long way to go, leave alone the art world. I think that post pandemic, one cannot think about activity merely in the digital world metaverse or in the physical world. We need to think of how the two can come together and dance. I believe that a new direction could and should come out of here.” Below: Renuka Rajiv, shrine of soft ghosts, 2022.

ICON OF THE YEAR
first questions, like: What the hell are you doing in Palm Beach?” “ISN’T ONE OF YOUR Here is Tom Ford, the King of Sex, looking still, at 62, very much like the King of Sex—if not terribly Palm Beachy. He’s wearing heavily distressed blue jeans and a blue denim shirt with few enough pearl buttons fastened to reveal an impressively muscular chest gilded in hair, plus black Chelsea boots and a Texas Timex—a gold Rolex Oyster Perpetual watch that he bought on Place Vendôme in Paris during his 10-year reign at Gucci. Ford has agreed to an exit interview capping his historic three-decade-long fashion and beauty career, saying he is willing to discuss anything and everything under the condition that I come to Palm Beach, where he is currently living with his 11-year-old son, Jack. Since stepping away from fashion earlier this year, Ford has largely declined interviews—until this one. As we talk, I find myself thinking that part of the reason he acquiesced is simply because he’s lonely. “I’m not used to sitting around talking about myself anymore,” Ford says. “It feels very bizarre. I have no mate, no partner, no adult in my life. I talk about, you know, Minecraft, YouTube, Messi. So just having an adult conversation at all is a bizarre thing for me.” In November 2022, Estée Lauder, Ford’s partner in his juggernaut fragrance and beauty business going back to its launch in 2005, announced that it had agreed to buy the entirety of his namesake label for a total of $2.8 billion. The deal made him, personally, a billionaire. It also signalled the end of Ford’s unprecedented run in the luxury business. Starting with his electric, star-making turn at a previously floundering Gucci, and continuing with the booming success under his own name, Ford’s persona and very visage transcended the insular world of fashion and became culturally synonymous with swagger, sex, and luxury itself. When I ask Ford why he sold his company and, yes, what the hell is he doing in Palm Beach, the answer is the same: Richard’s death. Ford and fashion journalist Richard Buckley met in an elevator at a fashion show in 1986. It was love, Ford has said, by the time the elevator hit the ground floor. They were together for 35 years, and married for nine, until Buckley’s death in September 2021, after complications stemming from an earlier cancer treatment. In the wake of that loss, Ford and Jack moved here full-time, into a 1920s mansion acquired in a house swap with a neighbour—a deal that reportedly carried a total value of well over $100 million. As we sit in the living room, Ford’s butler, Anthony, brings Ford a Diet Coke and me a glass of sparkling water. Outside, there is an occasional arrhythmic thud, which turns out to be Jack, who is running the length of the house pounding a soccer ball into a pair of nets. This is an unusually quiet moment for Ford. We agree to call it the second intermission in his career—a break before the third act as a full-time film-maker begins. Ford still delivers heroic doses of all his most recognizable personality traits: the impeccable old-world manners, the grandiloquent bombast, the devastating charm, and the outrageous provocations. But over the course of our time together, he also reveals a new sensitivity—and more than a little heartbreak. “Maybe a year ago,” Ford tells me, “I had to have knee surgery from tennis. So they had to put me under. When I went in, they said, ‘Who do we contact in case of emergency?’ And I literally had no one. So I put my PA.” Our interviews begin with a three-hour session in Ford’s living room and continue over dinner in a corner booth at the nearby restaurant Le Bilboquet. (Ford picked me up from my hotel in his black Range Rover Autobiography, with Sirius XM’s Studio 54 channel playing.) They conclude several weeks later over Zoom. 1 1 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 I’ve been working on a joke. It goes, How do you dress for Palm Beach in September? And the answer is: You shouldn’t be in Palm Beach in September. It’s true. It’s a weird ghost town and even when it’s going, it’s a suburb of New York. That’s how I think of it. Two hours and 20 minutes. No jet lag. We’re going to London on Wednesday. Jack’s coming with me because, since Richard died, he’s terrified I’m gonna die. Did he express that verbally? “Dad, I’m scared you’re gonna die too.” Oh, yeah. I said, Look, I can fly. “But you could crash.” Yeah. I’m not gonna crash. “You don’t know that.” Okay. I don’t know that. So let’s say I go somewhere and a plane crashes, you’re still alive. If you’re with me, you’re dead. Which would you rather be? And he said, “I’d rather be with you.” Oh my God. So, why Palm Beach? Richard and I lived in London for 22 years. Paris for 10, Milan for 4. But this time, we moved back to LA from London because he was sick. [The house in LA] was basically Cedars-Sinai. And every contemporary memory I have of it is not good. It was a sad house. After Richard died, I was driving back from a screening at CAA that Madonna was having for, like, four people. The streets were deserted everywhere. I was so used to Richard being in the seat next to me. And I felt so lonely. I just thought, This is the loneliest place. I have to get out of here. I thought, Where can I give Jack the life he’s used to? Which is tennis every day. Soccer every day. Warm weather, swimming pools. A liberal grade school. I have a history with Palm Beach going back to when I was at Gucci. After shows, I would rent a little place here, just come and do nothing. Lie by the pool. You know, Anne Rice, in one of her vampire books, wrote that every 150 years, vampires had to dig themselves down into the ground in order to come back up eventually and appreciate life again. That it was all just too much. And that’s what I feel this is—this is like a reset. I needed that to figure out act three. And so, now that you’ve sold your company, how are you thinking about act three? There are several reasons I sold my company. I felt, after 35 years, I had said everything I could say with fashion. It’s important to know when to get off the stage. I loved making the two films that I made. That was the most fun I’ve ever had in my entire life. I’m 62. Hopefully, I’ll remain somewhat together until 82. So I wanna spend the next 20 years of my life making films. And the clock is ticking. And so it

was time to say goodbye to fashion. Fashion is a younger man’s game. Designers rarely change the world of fashion at 62. I did it at 35, maybe until 45. Then I shifted into the moment when you become a household name and you make a lot of money. What were the other factors that led you to the decision to sell the business? Richard’s death. Boy, talk about mortality. When someone dies, their eyes are open. You can’t close them. It’s not like in the movies where they do this [Ford passes his hand over his eyes] and they stay closed. They pop open. Wow. I spent two hours with him, talking to him because I wasn’t expecting him to die that particular day. You know, slipping his wedding rings off. Taking off his watch. Flipping his body over to take his wallet out before they took him away. I felt like I was robbing him. Talk about driving home the idea of a limited time on the planet. It was like, I really want to make movies. Clock’s ticking. Let’s go back to the beginning of your fashion career. How did you end up working at Perry Ellis? Marc [Jacobs] hired me. At that time, he was creative director of all Perry Ellis. And I remember being very jealous that he was younger than I was, but somehow he was more successful. And before long you landed a job at Gucci, and moved to Milan, right? I was pragmatic enough to know, even at that time, that if you become famous as a European designer, you are global. If you become famous as an American designer, you are American. You know, Calvin Klein in Europe meant nothing. Marc became a global brand because he went to Vuitton. Had he not gone to Vuitton, the rest of the world wouldn’t know who Marc Jacobs was. So I knew that, and I thought, If I’m gonna work hard and be a success as a fashion designer, I need to go to Europe. So you’re the design director of Gucci at age 30. But Gucci was in disrepair. The task was to reanimate it. In the beginning, did you think of it as a dream job or a stepping stone that got you to Europe? It was a stepping stone. Maurizio [Gucci’s] dream was to make it an Italian Hermès. Which it had been in his childhood. It was a good dream and a good idea, but it wasn’t 1 2 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Looks from Tom Ford’s Gucci collections from fall-winter 1995, fall-winter 1996, and springsummer 1997. fashion. They didn’t really make clothes like people think, and they didn’t really have big runway shows. So I thought, Well, if I learn all of the manufacturers, and how everything works in Europe, I’ll start my own brand. And then I didn’t need to, because once I became creative director, it felt like my own brand. I grafted my personality onto the Gucci brand. I went back and watched your old fashion shows on YouTube and all I could think is, This collection fucks, you know? So much of the magic of your time there was connected to sex. I would give the models a talk right before the show, and I would say with my microphone—after I’d already had the drinks—“When you walk down this runway, everyone in this room should want to fuck you. Everyone.” Now I didn’t do that same speech for the last five years. I can’t say that to models anymore, “Everyone should want to fuck you”, but I used to always say that. And it was important even in the way they looked. In the way they walked. So let’s dig in on the Gucci years. Do you remember where you were when you got the call that Maurizio Gucci had been shot and killed? Yes, absolutely. I was in Florence at our factory. It was early in the morning, 8.30am. Maurizio had an office across the street from my office, and from my window I could see the steps where he was shot, but I wasn’t there. I think everyone’s first thought was that it was a Mafia hit. Ridley [Scott] didn’t put this in the movie [House of Gucci]: At one point Maurizio had to cough up 40 million bucks to Investcorp. He didn’t have the money. No bank was going to loan it to him. And he magically came up with it. You assumed, well, the Mafia gave him the money. You’re in Italy. Also, those scenes in the Ridley Scott movie where I come in and meet with Maurizio and say, “I see men in thongs,” none of that ever happened. I didn’t see men in thongs at first. That came later [laughs]. House of Gucci was a little condensed. Your first show there was not a hit. It was terrible. After that show, Richard said, “You’ve gotta find a way to make it sexy. The girls have to want to wear the clothes. The girls don’t want to wear those clothes.” That was all he had to say. And it was like, Yes! So what was the breakthrough? It was with men’s. There was a men’s show in Florence. At that time I was young enough to still actually go out to clubs. And you could feel this ’70s revival starting up, so I went deep into that. I took the Gucci loafer for men, and I made it in patent leather car finish. And I used tons of velvet and colour, and silk shirts open to here. And it worked. And so I thought, Okay, well I’m just going to carry this through for women. And I did. Although it was the next show [fall 1996] for Gucci that was the closest one to what is still my own permanent taste—the show with the white dresses with the cutouts, and the women in the tuxedos. It was more understated in a way, but it hit a chord in the room. I could feel it. Back then people didn’t have phones. You had 13 minutes to introduce something that should jar them. And then convince them of it, and then make it so beautiful that they would cry. After you set the world on fire, and your Gucci was the hottest thing going, what was the pressure like? Oh, I was so into it. Feeding off of it. To really be successful at women’s fashion, you have to live and breathe nothing else. “Oh, I am half businessman. Half designer. I always was. There’s an intuition that comes with the kind of business brain I have. You know what’s coming next. You feel it.”
Twenty-four hours a day. There can be nothing else in your life. OPPOSITE PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM LEF T: FIRST VIEW (3); DAN LECCA, VOGUE, 1995. THIS PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEF T: GET T Y IMAGES; FIRST VIEW (4). Once you capture the zeitgeist, like with a run of three shows at Gucci, how do you keep it going? It’s easy. You have to keep a thread of yourself in it. People used to say, “How do you make everything so sexy? And why do you make everything so sexy?” I don’t start out saying we need to make a sexy dress. I look at a dress and I say, “I can’t see her waist. I want to see that. I can’t see her ass. I want to see—where are her tits?” We had dinner in LA once and you said to me, “You give the world your taste once. That’s it.” It’s true. To what extent was that 10 years at Gucci your one time at the zeitgeist? That was it. I kept finessing that for the rest of my career. I had a 10-year run. And I think that’s all you get. A PR person would tell me not to say that. But that was where I moved the needle culturally. I was in my 30s and early 40s. How many years will Taylor have it? I mean, the Beatles. When you actually go back and look at how long they existed, it was like seven years, eight years. Nothing. And from there you’re just moving the pieces around the board. I mean, if you get that much time—that’s amazing. Tell me about a wild moment from the Gucci years. Well, what’s the statute of limitations? That’s a hard one. When I wanted to show those G-strings, it was hard to get a really good male model. Finally, one of them was like, “Yes, I’ll wear the thong.” Thank God. At the show, he was about to go down the runway and I would check everyone, right? I looked down and it was like Peter Cottontail. So much hair sticking out of his ass crack. I said, “Give me the trimmers.” I bent him over and I literally just went zip! And then I said, “Okay, you can go out.” And out he went. One thing I didn’t understand until I started researching this piece is what an instrumental role you played in essentially creating the modern fashion system, which is dominated by [French luxury conglomerates] LVMH and Kering. So in 1999, Bernard Arnault and LVMH attempted a hostile takeover of Gucci when you and [Gucci Group CEO] Domenico De Sole were at the height of your powers. It played out in the papers every fucking day back when it was happening. It was in the Financial Times, in the Wall Street Journal. It was everywhere. The LVMH takeover was ultimately thwarted through an alliance you and Domenico formed with François Pinault, who had not previously been in the luxury business. He became majority shareholder in Gucci. And that’s when the Gucci Group really transformed into this multi-brand luxury group. Which is now called Kering. We created Kering. There was a name change, but we created Kering. Why build a group? We had $3 billion to invest, courtesy of our deal with François, and we needed to grow. So the first acquisition was Saint Laurent, and it was a billion dollars. And it was done only if I would design it. Because at that time, everything I touched, worked. Not always the case, but it was definitely the case then. We had to deploy this cash, but my criteria in figuring out who to invest in was: I’m the only creative person here. In case something happens, you can’t have a company that big with one creative. Who do I admire? Whoever those people are that I admire and I’m jealous of, we need to get. And so I went after Lee McQueen. Can you say more about what you responded to about Alexander McQueen as a designer? I was a commercial fashion designer. That doesn’t mean there wasn’t an artistic element to what I did. But I was a commercial fashion designer. Lee was an artist who happened to use the medium of clothing and fashion shows to express himself. At that moment in time, [current Louis Vuitton artistic director of womenswear] Nicolas Ghesquière was hot. Absolutely hot. And he did something totally different than what I did. I wanted him to start his own collection. He didn’t want to do that. So we bought Balenciaga and he was at Balenciaga. Stella [McCartney] addressed a totally different customer that we did not have. She was onto all of this environmental stuff, way ahead of everybody else. And so that made sense. With Bottega [Veneta], I went after Tomas Maier. He and Richard were best friends back in the ’80s, and he had the best taste. In assembling it, you needed brands that didn’t compete so that you could have a very well-rounded portfolio. And people that I admired. So that’s what we did. Does business success get you off the way creative success does? Oh, I am half businessman. Half designer. I always was. I have a gift. My greatest gift is, you can lay five pairs of shoes down in front of me, and the one that I pick will be the commercial one. I have commercial taste. Maybe, hopefully, at a high level. But if you’re not making money, you can’t do what you want. There’s an intuition that comes with the kind of business brain I have. I have a certain feeling about it, and I know that it’s the right business decision, even though it makes no sense to someone who’s just looking at the spreadsheets. You know what’s coming next. You feel it. So as you step away from luxury fashion, where do you think it’s all headed? I have no idea. And that’s one reason I’m stepping away. I don’t really believe you. You don’t have that same intuitive feeling? It’s gotten so far away from why I got into the business, which was to make a beautiful garment that made a person stunning and incrediblelooking when they walked into a room. That was why I became a fashion designer. So this new— what it has become is something that maybe I understand, but I don’t necessarily like. You sent me a text the other day about your successor at Tom Ford, Peter Hawkings, who worked for you for years. You mentioned how displeased you are by some of the things he’s been saying as he gets started. I have, since, calmed down a little bit. But I read in a GQ blog or something where Peter said he was given a blank page to start Tom Ford menswear. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 2 1
Yes. It really upset me because starting Tom Ford menswear [in 2007] was one of the things I’m probably the most proud of in my entire career. I was used to being at Gucci and when I wanted something, I just had it made. And all of a sudden I couldn’t—I didn’t have any clothes. So I brought in all the clothes from my wardrobe. I had everything made in my size. Luckily, I’m a 48 regular, which is the fitting size. So I fit all the suits on myself. Peter wasn’t able to start for a while. He was still John Ray’s assistant at Gucci. So those first few years, that collection was built on me. It was enormously personal. I literally sent my sofas out to be copied for the stores. I loaned art from my house to the stores. It was one of the things I’m the most proud about because it was the foundation of the company. So I got in touch with him [recently]. I said, Pete, I don’t want to say these things publicly and contradict you, but it wasn’t exactly a blank page. I was very worked up about it. I’m a lot less worked up about it now. You know, when you sell your company you’re prepared for anything. And I really am prepared for anything. Whatever direction they go, Peter’s blank page starts now. But, you know, that’s my fashion legacy. The Tom Ford company, the Tom at Gucci, the Tom at Saint Laurent—that’s mine. It’s tied up in two neat volumes with a bow. Between Peter Hawking’s debut at Tom Ford and Sabato De Sarno’s debut at Gucci, all anyone seemed to be talking about at Fashion Week in Milan was the influence of Tom Ford at Gucci. Well, it’s very nice, but I didn’t give it a lot of thought. Fashion is cyclical. That was, God, 20 years ago. I’m glad that what I did has come back again. Of all the famous men that you dressed over the years, who embodied the Tom Ford man the most? Oh, God. Who embodied the Tom Ford man? I mean, me. I built it for myself. Brad [Pitt] was the very first one [to wear the brand]. And at the beginning I had an exclusive thing with Brad. I would only dress Brad. Brad only wore me, or he wore me to his big events. At Gucci we were sending clothes to everybody, and it lost its cachet. So when I launched Tom Ford, I went to Brad and that was who I dressed. Did you pay him? No. I’ve never paid a single celebrity to wear my clothes or come to a show, ever. Ever, ever, ever. And now everyone does. You mentioned to me that you’ve been 1 2 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 sober for 14 years. When you stopped drinking, did that cut off the drugs too? The alcohol was a gateway to the drugs. And, you know, my son hasn’t read any of this stuff yet. He will. And I’ll need to talk to him because he shares the same genetic background that I do, which is English-Irish. I think we’re predisposed. My father was a heavy drinker. But the alcohol, you know, was a gateway. [Cocaine] is very popular in the fashion world. I realized it was a problem when I started doing it in the mornings. So how are you feeling about selling your company, Tom Ford International? I realized one day that I was gonna die. And that I created something that will live on past me, because there is too much money involved. So whether it’s 50 years from now or 5 years from now, a lot of stuff that I hate will be generated. People are gonna do a lot of shit with it that would make you turn over in your grave. Why not let ’em do it now? Just do it while you’re alive. I mean, do you think Balenciaga or Givenchy—I mean, Hubert de Givenchy would die if he saw, and so would Cristóbal Balenciaga. So why not have fun for the rest of my life and do something I find really creatively exciting? How do you plan for that? Well, when we were gonna sell the company, we went to Goldman Sachs, and at the beginning they put together a presentation, as you do when you’re selling a company and going out to multiple bidders. But they put together a presentation that was very me-heavy. I was like, Why would anyone buy this if the business is so dependent on me? I said: Put the presentation together as though I’m dead. It still has my name on it [Ford reaches inside the waist of his jeans and pulls out his underwear to show the Tom Ford waistband] but— Um, wait—you’ve started wearing underwear? Yeah. Why? Well, especially with jeans, because these have rips. And any minute another rip is gonna happen. Probably 10 years ago—this is true—before I was wearing underwear, I looked down and an actual testicle was completely out. Let’s talk about directing movies. As someone who’s used to the pace of fashion and publishing, Hollywood seems scary slow. As a director, it takes three years to make a movie. I have maybe time for five more movies in my life. So they have to be meaningful. So you’re working on a few different projects, at various stages of development? One is an original. An extremely personal thing. A Single Man (2009) and Nocturnal Animals (2016) were both adaptations. This is completely from scratch? Completely from scratch. Then another is a book from Anne Rice. We started the process in 2004, while she was alive, obviously. And what is your writing process? It’s absolutely expository. I start every morning at nine o’clock. I sit down and I work from nine until one. Even if I don’t think I have anything to say, I type. The beauty really for me of film-making is the writing. Because when you’re writing it, it’s perfect. Nobody fucks up. The clothes are perfect. Everyone’s saying it exactly the way you want. It’s absolutely clear. The hard part for me is shooting—because this didn’t work, that didn’t work. You’ve got to keep moving. You’ve got a schedule. Where are you with your spirituality? I had it for a little while, maybe about the same time I stopped drinking. It was one thing that compelled me to write A Single Man, because Christopher Isherwood was very spiritual, in an Eastern way. I was reading the Tao Te Ching every night before I’d go to bed. I’d read one of those very potent sentences, and I was able to have it. If you go back to the Tao now, has it lost its potency? I need to try again. I’m very pragmatic. I can’t actually comprehend the science, but the universe is so vast—our planet is so insignificant. There was a film in the 1950s with Anne Francis that was so ahead of its time. The idea is, maybe our purpose in evolution was to create an AI being that becomes a consciousness. It will be like God, where we have created it in our image and it will hold every bit of all of us. Ultimately, we will be unnecessary. Maybe our purpose in evolution is to end biological life, and to figure out how to create the next level of being—an electronic consciousness. What was the movie called—Forbidden Planet? Or Lost Planet? I don’t know. Anyway, whatever. It’s not that interesting. Turn that recorder off, let’s have dinner. WILL WELCH is GQ ’s global editorial director.
THE LAST WORD IN TRAVEL PHOTO: ERRIKOS ANDREOU/CONDÉ NAST TRAVELLER INDIA

SURVIVOR OF THE YEAR Last year, Tremaine Emory was one of the fashion world’s most prolific new superstars, juggling a high-profile position at Supreme with his own brand, Denim Tears, when a serious vascular event almost killed him. Now, the iconoclastic designer known for channelling powerful histories of the Black experience is finally telling his own story—and reuniting with the medical team who saved his life. BY MIK AWAKE PHOTOGRAPHS BY JASON NOCITO D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 2 5
breakfast one morning earlier this year, Tremaine Emory moved cautiously through his airy Tribeca loft to put on a record. With each step towards the turntable, the metallic clank of his Lofstrand crutch echoed through the apartment. After he dropped the needle and the music began to play, he made his way to a big table in the middle of the room and took a seat. Emory was dressed cosy in a mostly unbuttoned shirt, flannel pants, and a pair of all-black Hokas. He wore a Martine Rose cap, bill to the back. “It’s been a fucking journey, man,” he said. “It’s been a war. The second-hardest thing I’ve ever dealt with, next to my mom dying.” As the melodies of Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers drifted around us, Emory told me about his year. It’s been a remarkable one. After a while, the music would fade and the record would spin in silence, and his words would continue, filling the space between us with the story of his epic year of struggle and triumph. If you’ve read anything about Emory in the last few months, chances are you might be surprised to know that the war the celebrated fashion designer was describing had little to do with the headlines he’d made this year, or the discourse he’d sparked in the worlds of fashion and art about systemic racism. It had nothing to do with Supreme, the streetwear behemoth, where he’d served as its first-ever publicly confirmed creative director until a bitter split in August ended his 18-month tenure—and nothing to do with his public criticism of the company and the discourse that still circulates online and offline about the gatekeeping of Black creativity. The war that Emory waged was more specific, more dangerous, and ultimately more transformative than his time at Supreme. It’s a battle he’ll likely keep waging for the rest of his life. And it began on an otherwise pleasant fall night last year, with a sudden and excruciating pain that he felt radiating along an unfamiliar path within his body, directly behind his heart. BEFORE SITTING TO A U T U M N I N N E W Y O R K is a time of aching contradictions—a sweetness born of chill and change. As the song goes, it’s a time marked by the promise of new love, often mingled with pain. In 2022, that dissonance surrounded Emory’s first autumn back in Lenape land after a dozen years away. 1 2 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 His grassroots fashion journey had by causing discourse, I’m gonna shut it down.” then become the stuff of lore. After growing By the looks of it, he may be a long way from shutting anything down. An eerie up in Jamaica, Queens, in the ’80s and ’90s, he’d worked his way up at Marc Jacobs from thing started to happen while I began meeta retail job in downtown Manhattan to a ing with Emory this year: I started seeing cotton wreaths everywhere. On a young management position in London, where he began to emcee parties with his DJ friend brother on the train. On the rack of a Harlem Acyde (AKA Ade Odunlami) and, later on, boutique. On an Afrobeats star’s selfie. Maybe I hadn’t been paying close enough the music exec Brock Korsan, under the attention before, or maybe 2023 was the handle No Vacancy Inn—gatherings that attracted the likes of Frank Ocean and the year that Denim Tears, already enshrined in late fashion trailblazer Virgil Abloh. In the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume 2016, Kanye West hired him at Yeezy, where Institute for a remix of Ralph Lauren and collaborations with Ugg and Levi’s, was he would become brand director. All the while, a core component of Emory’s becoming a staple of global fashion. As one rise in fashion was his abiding interest in recent meme put it, “Denim Tears done hit sparking conversation with people—what he the streets harder than crack in the 80s.” often calls “locking in”. Whether it’s designIt was on account of the breakout success ing a Black Jesus sweatshirt to re-create of Denim Tears—as far as Emory underdiscussions he’d had on the streets of early stands—that Supreme had sought him out. When I asked him why he thought ’00s Queens or sharing an MF Doom lyric to the streetwear giant, founded in 1994 spark debate at a function, Emory has long by James Jebbia, had wanted him to be been focused on the exchange of provocacreative director, he responded bluntly: tive ideas, especially around Black history and culture. His voice is slightly nasal, vow“Clout.” After being acquired in 2020 by the els elongated by a New York childhood. He North Face parent company VF Corp in an sprinkles conversations with vintage bars industry-shaking $2.1 billion deal, Supreme from Nas, Yasiin Bey, and Jay-Z. He rememappointed Emory in February of 2022. bers details about new acquaintances and, “I came in very pragmatic,” he said of unintentionally, surprises them with this. his ambitions at Supreme. “The brand is He’s often quick with a retort to strangers, an important heritage brand. It’s not what punctuating witty comebacks with a boomit once was to young people or to culture. ing staccato laugh. I came to bring it back to top of class. That’s what I came to do with them.” In 2019, he founded the cerebral Africandiaspora sportswear line Denim Tears, whose While trying to steer Supreme forward in the fall of 2022, Emory found most recent release of 30,000 cotton-wreathhimself more in the public eye than ever adorned sweatsuits sold out in 15 minutes. before—and busier than ever. There was “I just want to see the cotton wreath, that symbol, that form, spread as far as possithe rancour of a confrontation with Kanye ble into popular culture,” Emory said of West on Instagram that saw Emory standthe brand’s signature design, which was ing up to his former Yeezy boss for West’s inspired by a post on the artist Kara Walker’s treatment of Abloh, their mutual friend, in Instagram page. “Because every time somethe months before the designer succumbed one wears it, there’s another chance for to a mostly private battle with a rare form conversation and discourse about the state of heart cancer. Meanwhile, Denim Tears was on the cusp of announcing a new of Black people, the state of America, the state of the world.” collection with Dior, one of its biggest colBut Emory’s designs at Denim Tears avoid laborations to date. The ambitious project, overt messaging. The cotton wreaths are easDior Tears, would release in the summer of 2023 and pay homage to 20th-century ily mistaken for large flowers, and the indigo handprints that highlighted its second colBlack American expatriates in France who laboration with Levi’s were inspired by Julie fled stateside racism, like Miles Davis and Dash’s 1991 masterpiece, Daughters of the James Baldwin. Emory commissioned a Dust, a film that touches on the indigo trade. sumptuous short film set in Egypt, reputed To understand the thought and research for its ancient history of cotton production, behind Denim Tears clothing requires the millennia before it became the foundation kind of curiosity and bookishness that of America’s 19th-century economy. Emory, who studied film at community The sweetness of new love was also college before dropping out, layers onto entering Emory’s life that fall. He had just everything he releases. Denim Tears vibrates begun dating a colleague at Supreme, Andee with backstory, though not at the McConnell. “Most people kind expense of irreverent and soulful Opening pages: At the of pick up on that big, warm, surfaces. “I wanna start uncom- Weill Cornell Medical fuzzy energy no matter who Center, in Manhattan, fortable conversations,” Emory you are to him,” McConnell Emory reunited with says of their first meeting. The explained of his aim for the label. the team of doctors, two clicked immediately—a “I don’t agree with all the things therapists, and that people say or feel about the nurses who cared for conversation-oriented duo brand, but I like that there’s dis- him after he suffered hoping to usher in a new era at an aortic dissection. course. When the brand stops the company.
On matters personal and professional, Emory and McConnell seemed to be in lockstep, spending more time together outside of the office in electric conversations about life and work, but keeping their new love a secret at Supreme. “We always used to say, It’s got to be our molecules or something that are just fusing together,” McConnell said. Within the larger miracle of love, there was a specific miracle in the fact that McConnell and Emory were together that autumn night when something terrible started to happen inside his chest. They had just returned from listening to jazz at a nearby spot when, soon after midnight, Emory doubled over in agony, clutching at his back and short of breath. At first, McConnell thought it might be a heart attack, but when his breathing settled and the pain in his upper back slightly relented, she speculated that it might be a muscle spasm from stress. She rubbed his back, ran a hot shower over him, drew him a bath. While he was still in the bath, his legs went numb. McConnell recalled: “That’s when we called 9-1-1.” for what happened in Emory’s body that night is an aortic dissection. It’s a medical nightmare, as rare as it is lethal. Nineteen-eighties sitcom star John Ritter died of one, as do an estimated 13,000 people in the United States each year. Back in the day, doctors used to call it the widow maker. The first hours after a tear in the aorta’s inner lining are the most crucial for survival. The ambulance pulled to a stop outside the Tribeca building, red lights dancing against the darkness. Here was the promise of relief, answers—the hope of survival. There was a tense moment when McConnell accidentally locked herself out of the apartment with the paramedics, forcing Emory, sopping wet with no feeling in his legs, to crawl across the floor to open the door. The EMTs began firing questions at him. Was this his apartment? they asked. Had he been doing drugs? Emory was rolled outside to the waiting ambulance in a wheelchair, and during his transfer from the chair to the vehicle, he sustained an injury to his toe. He couldn’t feel anything below his waist, but blood was streaming from the wound. In the hours ahead, the toe would turn gangrenous from lack of blood flow, and eventually its tip fell off. Part of what makes an aortic tear so lethal is that emergency room doctors often fail to discern the condition, prioritizing more common ailments like heart attack. Relatively young and healthy, Emory was still conscious, still breathing. With McConnell at his side, he waited as medical staff moved them from one hallway to another. The hours passed, the couple lost track of time. Meanwhile, the crisis inside Emory’s body was worsening. According THE TECHNICAL TERM to Emory and McConnell, several hours passed like this before the morning shift rotated on and a Black doctor who saw Emory became alarmed by the numbness in his legs—and an increasing pain in his lower abdomen. “She had a sense of urgency that no one else did,” McConnell recalled. “And the stomach pain seemed to really get it on her radar that she needed to move fast with this guy.” When results of a CT angiogram returned, highlighting the state of Emory’s vascular system, the intricate weave of blood-carrying arteries, capillaries, and veins, McConnell vividly remembered the doctor’s reaction: “The look on her face was panic inducing.” Scans would reveal that the tear in Emory’s aorta began in his chest and extended down through his pelvis and femoral artery— beyond the edge of the X-ray. What the doctors didn’t say aloud, their actions— suddenly urgent and decisive—filled in the blanks. Within minutes, Emory was in an emergency transport vehicle headed to Weill Cornell Medical Center on the Upper East Side for surgery. It was at this point, alone in an ambulance racing toward the unknown, that Emory took out his phone and began reaching out to everyone he loved for what he assumed might be the last time. One of the numbers that Emory texted while racing in the ambulance for emergency surgery belonged to a younger designer named Brick, who, along with partner Du, cofounded the menswear house Bstroy. Both men are close friends and frequent collaborators of Emory’s— up-and-coming leaders of what he and Abloh would often refer to as “our tribe”. Brick was unnerved by the message his mentor sent that October morning. “CALL ME” appeared in all caps. He called Emory back immediately, and when Emory picked up, the blare of an ambulance siren filled the background. “He’s like, ‘Yo, I’m fucked up,’ ” Brick recounted. “ ‘If I don’t make it, y’all know what to do. I got y’all.’ And then just hangs up the phone.” As Brick remembered the details of that day and the ensuing surgery that dragged on into evening, making everyone begin to D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 2 7
lose hope, he was overcome with emotion. He, Du, and I were in a car zooming up the West Side Highway. Brick leaned forward on the seat, his head draped over his folded arms. Du wrapped a consoling arm around his friend and business partner. Until now, neither had really spoken of this at length. “Pause, but he was somebody I waited my whole life for, bro,” Brick said through tears. “Tremaine is my friend, my brother, my contemporary, all that type a shit, so when it happened, it hurt in a different way, my n-gga.” towards Weill Cornell hospital, Dr. Christopher Lau, the director of endovascular surgery, was busy studying the scans of Emory’s aortic dissection that had been forwarded. A Brooklyn native and the son of Chinese immigrants, Lau was responsible for making a series of rapid judgments about how the next few hours would go. As often is the case with emergency surgeries like this, the doctor’s analyses had to be impeccable: informed guesses on multiple dimensions. And it all needed to happen very quickly. Since Lau mostly operates on vessel tears closer to the heart, he knew he was not the best person to handle the extensive tear down Emory’s aorta: He would need the technological savvy of vascular surgeon Dr. Christopher Agrusa, who, over the course of eight hours, painstakingly repaired the inside of the aorta and replaced Emory’s destroyed femoral artery with a Gore-Tex implant to shunt blood across his pelvis. And maybe most important of all, Lau’s analysis also predicted the damage that would be wreaked on Emory’s body once Agrusa had successfully restored blood flow. Lau could tell from bloodwork that the muscles of Emory’s legs had already begun to decompose—as though he’d actually died—and would begin to poison his organs AS EMORY RUSHED 1 2 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 once blood flow was restored to the legs. Attempting to process the polluted blood, his kidneys would fail, and with them the rest of his organs. For this, Lau readied an aggressive, taxing regimen of dialysis in the ICU that Emory would endure for nearly a month after surgery. The regimen saved both kidneys, although they remain compromised. Those precious hours of waiting in a downtown ER had put his body in crisis mode. In addition to dialysis, Emory underwent an excruciating surgical procedure known as a fasciotomy, in which deep and long incisions create open wounds in both legs to relieve the pressure as blood flow returns. Over the course of the next three months in the hospital, Emory would lose 70 pounds, mostly from muscle that fell into disuse. He spent the first five days on a ventilator and the rest of the month hooked to drips and dialysis machines in the ICU. He was in a perpetual state of deep exhaustion, and a bout of sepsis led to intense hallucinations. “It was nuts,” he recalled. Once his condition had stabilized, he was protected from work obligations for over two months, a pause unlike anything he’d experienced, at least since a month-long period he spent recovering from his tenure at Yeezy, a period of rest and reflection that would eventually birth Denim Tears. expressed interest in speaking with Emory’s father, who was by his side in the ICU almost as much as McConnell, Emory warned me to “clear your day”. Despite an illustrious career as a TV cameraman with multiple Emmy nominations, Tracy Emory has fought to maintain a small-town Georgia sensibility in himself and in his approach to life. When he moved his family to Queens in the early 1980s to become a cameraman for CBS, he and his wife, Sheralyn, didn’t know much about big city living. They’d been childhood sweethearts growing up in a small town not too far outside of Augusta. WHEN I FIRST Segregated since the legal end of slavery, their community was tied together—racially, geographically, culturally—in a way that was inescapable. “Everybody knew each other, everybody grew up together,” said Tracy. With Tracy and Sheralyn, there was no dating, no meet-cute; they’d known each other their whole lives. Sometime around high school, the two just kind of paired off. “My brain was stimulated by a lot of love,” Tracy told me. When they moved to New York, that approach to life, work, and spirituality was something the couple made an effort to maintain—only instead of fishing, they took their children sledding, and museum-going, and on excursions to the opera. “There was literally no drama,” Tracy said of the atmosphere he and Sheralyn created at home. “In America, that’s what you do, you take care of your family. That’s it.” Mostly, taking care of the family meant keeping his three boys safe in New York City during the crack era. Growing up in the rural South, Stay off the chain gang had been the mantra Tracy heard from his elders; it was an ethos that he passed along to his sons in the age of mass incarceration. “Basically,” he said, “I wanted to keep them outta jail.” Against the threat of police and drugworld violence, Emory and his brothers were given strict curfews, but that could only do so much. Too many of Emory’s neighbourhood friends were shot to death. His barber and close friend, Raheem Grays, was killed during an attempted robbery of his barbershop, unlocking a grief that Emory still wears on his head. In the years after Grays’s murder, Emory grew out his hair, unable to sit in another barber’s chair, eventually letting it loc. “He went through a lot of suffering and pain,” his father said of those early years. For his part, Emory describes his early adulthood with the language of asphyxiation—he felt like he was suffocating in Jamaica. “I know n-ggas that work just as hard as me and ain’t where I’m at,” Emory said. “It ain’t ’cause I’m smarter or better. I’m just luckier than them. And I had Tracy and Sheralyn, and they didn’t.” When Emory first began experimenting with cotton-wreath designs, Tracy was worried that his son was floundering in fashion. He’d been downsized at Marc Jacobs, then fired as brand director of Yeezy by West— who, Emory says, later asked him to return, unsuccessfully. And he was still grieving the death of his mother, Sheralyn, who passed away from a heart attack just as Emory’s star was beginning to rise in the fashion firmament. “It kinda became the bane of my existence to do something that mattered to honour her,” said Emory. When he showed his father the first samples of the cotton-wreath line, Tracy grew even more worried for his son. “I did not like it,” Tracy recalled. He also sensed that encouragement was more important in that moment than
anything. “Tremaine!” Tracy exclaimed. “What a beautiful design!” All the while, he was thinking to himself, Lord, thankfully his bedroom in Queens is still there. Emory’s success in the fashion world has amazed Tracy, though not as much as his son’s ability to form genuine friendships with people from all walks of life and backgrounds, many of whom Tracy met for the first time in the hospital. “There’s no colour barrier,” Tracy said of Emory’s relationships. “He figured out a way to be friends with the world.” stabilizing in the ICU, overcoming a bout of pneumonia that filled his lungs with fluid, Emory arrived to a room of Weill Cornell’s Acute Inpatient Rehabilitation unit, where a window overlooked the East River. Here, he would spend the next two months in the care of Dr. Leroy Lindsay and his team of rehabilitation specialists. As a Black doctor in a field underpopulated by Black men—who make up only 3 per cent of the doctors in America— Lindsay was excited, if a bit intimidated, by the prospect of caring for a peer. “It’s not often that you get to treat someone so much like yourself,” said Lindsay. “Especially here on the Upper East Side. Both of our families are from the South. We’re literally the same age, same experiences, and we’re both rare in the spaces that we occupy. So I knew he had a long road ahead to recover functionally, physically, and also the gruelling psychological road that was before him. And I wanted to make sure that I was taking care of him on all of those fronts.” In between arduous sessions of physical therapy with Dr. Jaclyn Paler and long stretches alone in a bed, Emory welcomed a constant stream of visitors and well-wishers to that nondescript space. There were artists, like Theaster Gates, a longtime admirer and collaborator of Emory’s, who is designing the Denim Tears flagship space in SoHo, which will feature a perusable collection of rare African-art books. There were his No Vacancy Inn partners, Acyde and Korsan, who broke away from their hectic schedules to come to his bedside. There was the actor Jordan Masterson, who flew in amid the SAG-WGA strikes. There was Ocean. There was Arthur Jafa. There was the artist Chris Burrows, AFTER A MONTH Emory’s former flatmate in London who had been there the night Ye appeared at one of Emory’s parties, unannounced, to preview Yeezus before an intimate crowd. There was Guillaume Berg, the French DJ who had been out listening to jazz with Emory and McConnell that night before his medical nightmare began. There was Nigel Smart, who bonded with Emory over a love of Ghostface Killah at a mutual friend’s basement recording studio in Queens, back when everyone called Emory “Tre Deuce”. Smart has always admired his younger friend’s ability to navigate new spaces—like the exclusive Manhattan nightclubs that Emory was somehow able to get Smart and their friends inside, despite being barely of age. “We always trying to uplift each other,” Smart said. At the centre of Emory’s crisis, care, and recovery was McConnell, sleeping in a chair every night for the first weeks when his life hung in the balance, keeping everyone updated on a group-text thread, and finally revealing their office romance to colleagues at Supreme. “She held him down,” Smart said. And she held the tribe down, too, keeping an upbeat and positive attitude despite her dread, relaying good news over the group thread. Like when his kidneys regained function after weeks of dialysis and Emory said to her: “Tell the guys I peed.” “She didn’t owe me anything,” Emory said, his eyes going glassy. “And I still don’t know what I did to deserve that.” While he was still intubated, Emory had a realization that caused him to ask for a pen and paper. He began scribbling notes, but neither McConnell nor any of the nurses could make them out. A friend who was able to decipher Emory’s handwriting came to the rescue. Usually composed, the friend was suddenly hyperventilating. “Oh, my God, oh, my God,” he gasped, pacing with his hands over his head. “I know what he’s trying to say. I know what he’s trying to say!” McConnell stared at the slip of paper again. Soon the scribbles took shape. Four words formed into a question: Will you marry me? A U T U M N I N New York was beginning. Having officially resigned from Supreme, Emory was refocused on a new Denim Tears collaboration with ANOTHER Emory doubled over in agony, clutching at his back. Andee McConnell ran a hot shower over him, drew him a bath. Then his legs went numb. McConnell recalled: “That’s when we called 9-1-1.” Dr. Martens, drawing inspiration from the history of Caribbean immigrants to the United Kingdom after World War II, commonly known as the Windrush generation. McConnell had just resigned from Supreme after the company released a statement about Emory’s departure that she found dishonest. When Emory walked into the restaurant for our last interview, I noticed he’d made even more progress with his mobility. The Lofstrand crutch had been replaced by a hiking stick. He also seemed to be moving faster and with more surety than only a couple months before, a testament to his ongoing PT sessions with Paler. He and McConnell were in the middle of planning their wedding, which was only a few days away. Emory’s new reality of life with a disability has even begun to find its way—subtly, of course—into Denim Tears’ storytelling, with Paralympic athlete Garrison Redd serving as the brand’s newest look book model. Although his kidneys still aren’t 100 per cent, they have improved. Feeling in his right foot hasn’t returned, but he’s been starting to wiggle most of the toes on his left. “I’m a lucky bum, nah mean,” said Emory. “Unfortunately, I can’t thank everyone all the time, every time, but there’s nothing I’ve done that I’ve done on my own. I’ve had so much support from luck and life—and support from people.” He got misty again thinking about all the friends who came from far and near to spend time by his side in the hospital and all the medical workers, from janitors to surgeons, who helped him win his life back. Despite the unfortunate outcome of his time at Supreme, Emory said, “I’d do it all over again if it meant that I’d meet Andee.” It was a miraculous convergence of luck and competence that kept Emory on this side of life. It was love—for McConnell, for his family, for the dream of a family of his own, for what he’s put into his work, for the work still left to do, for his creative tribe, for the struggle and spirit of the Black diaspora— that seems to fuel him. “One of the aides said, ‘Always look back to remember how far you’ve come.’ That was a bar,” Emory said, recalling a rehabilitation session when he was starting to walk again. “Even now, it’s like I live in pain, bro. But I remember when I didn’t know if I could walk again. I didn’t know if I was gonna live, if I was gonna get off dialysis, if I was gonna be able to make it out the hospitals, see my little brother grow up, marry Andee, take a walk with Andee holding hands, go down to Georgia and see my grandma. So I gotta remember that, when I’m going through stuff in the present. I gotta remember what I’ve come through.” is the coauthor of ‘Dapper Dan: Made in Harlem’ and author of the forthcoming ‘Playground Moves: The Story of Rucker Park & Basketball’s Reinvention’. MIK AWAKE D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 2 9
RICHARD MILLE RM 07-04 AUTOMATIC WINDING SPORT Still pining for anything Succession-related? Feed the lust with Jeremy Strong’s favourite new bit of wrist candy, featuring a skeletonized automatic winding movement with hours, minutes, and function selector. The watch world has never been so unpredictable— Rolex dropping emoji date windows? Richard Mille’s candycoloured flexes? Pixelated dials? Rather than leaning on the archive, watchmakers are embracing an influx of fresh ideas and targeting a younger collector. And that “why the fuck not?” mentality has birthed some insanely covetable pieces.
OMEGA X SWATCH MOONSWATCH MOONSHINE 42MM At 18 months and counting, come rain or shine, the queues are still very real for this quartz internet-breaker. This one has pink Super-LumiNova detailing—a nod to the pink full moon of April. MONTBLANC 1858 GEOSPHERE 0 OXYGEN THE 8000 42MM The ability to withstand fogging and oxidization at the summit of the Alps is not something we knew we needed in a watch. But Montblanc’s latest is bringing out the mountaineer in us, with a titanium case it claims to be totally devoid of oxygen. TUDOR BLACK BAY 54 Why splurge seven digits on a dial when you can drop six on the most highly regarded watch of 2023? Nodding to yesteryear, the 37mm case holds a MT5400 calibre and a depth of 200m— dive right in. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 3 1
TAG HEUER CARRERA CHRONOGRAPH 39MM Ryan Gosling attempted to steal a Carrera in the brand’s recent viral ad; in the case of its new 60th-anniversary tribute, complete with an automatic chrono and an 80-hour power reserve, we can empathize. 1 3 2 G Q D E C GRAND SEIKO MAJESTIC WHITE BIRCH PLATINUM SPRING DRIVE 38.5MM Grand Seiko, now a separate, luxuryleaning arm of Japanese brand Seiko, produces artisanal creations to match the world’s best, and this particular masterpiece boasts a manual Spring Drive Calibre 9R02 that keeps ticking for days. 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 IWC SCHAFFHAUSEN INGENIEUR AUTOMATIC AQUA DIAL 40MM Using the shape of the all-new stainless steel Ingenieur, IWC brings an oldie-but-goodie out of retirement with a refreshed aqua dial that’s destined to conquer the zeitgeist.
PATEK PHILIPPE CALATRAVA 6119G 39MM There’s a hot new Patek in town, and Calatrava connoisseurs are eating up the charcoal-grey dial. What’s housed inside that crisp white-gold case? A brand-new hand-wound movement that makes it an immediate addition to every collector’s cop list. AUDEMARS PIGUET ROYAL OAK CONCEPT FLYING TOURBILLON GMT 4 4MM Taking bets on who’ll be first to be seen courtside sporting AP’s hautest new GMT tourby? Our money’s on celebrity collectors queuing for the brand’s tasty new 44mm titanium grail. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 3 3
ROLEX OYSTER PERPETUAL CELEBRATION 41MM The poppy, bubble-filled aesthetic of this new Rolex—a model the watch world thought had been discontinued— feels almost perfectly targeted at West Ham fans, but is equally suited to any occasion. OMEGA SEAMASTER AQUA TERRA SHADES CO-AXIAL MASTER CHRONOMETER 38MM Throwing new shades on a 38mm GOAT is bound to steal horological hearts. Especially when there’s a lacquered bay-green dial in the picture. 1 3 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
ORIENT MECHANICAL CLASSIC WATCH 38.4MM For the Japanese fine watchmakers, simplicity is a trademark of genius. A domed glass face, enveloped in a steel case, shines the spotlight on Roman numeral indices in six positions. Simple. Genius. PANERAI RADIOMIR OT TO GIORNI E 45MM E is for: ever thought recycling could look so good? Grails are going green with Panerai’s 45mm Italian stallion watch made from Brunito steel, or e-steel, which is 98.6 per cent recycled material. D E C BLANCPAIN FIF TY FATHOMS AUTOMATIQUE 45MM The 70th anniversary of the OG divers’ watch— hat tip to the 300m water-resistance and date window—is as essential for your dive holiday as your wet suit and snorkel. 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 3 5
HERMÈS H08 39MM An Hermès hallmark alongside the Birkin and the Kelly since 2021, the H08’s unique shape has carved out a new-age cult following for itself. The chunky rubber strap makes it feel sporty and sleek all at once. 1 3 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 GUCCI 25H TOURBILLON 40MM CHANEL J12 CYBERNETIC 38MM Gucci has been making haute horology for 51 years, and the 25H collection is a cult favourite. This 18-caratgold number packs a gorgeous tourbillon movement into a crazily slim 40mm case. The pixelated, Tron-era aesthetic of Chanel’s new Cybernetic feels like it’s been ripped from (or to) the metaverse— but trust us, the sapphire crystal bezel and ceramic-steel case has to be seen IRL.
BREMONT JAGUAR C-TYPE 43MM Much like Bagheera in Rudyard Kipling’s seminal hit, Bremont’s jibe at the Jag will provide you with a friend and accomplice—but this one has a bi-directional rotating tachymeter and scratch-resistant case too. ALPINA ALPINER EXTREME AUTOMATIC 41MM ZENITH PILOT AUTOMATIC STEEL 42MM Explorers have inspired a lot of watches over the years, and Alpina’s new adventurer hits the spot again. Plus, there’s a 36-hour power reserve in case you get stranded. Zenith holds a legitimate claim to being at the forefront of pilot watches and with a steel case, oversized crown, and black corrugated dial, this clean new-era model does its rich aviation history proud. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 3 7
REVERSO TRIBUTE MONOFACE SMALL SECONDS The Jekyll and Hyde of the watch world, this reversible must-have is ready to match your mood—and it’s never been better than its new iteration in a slender 7.56mm case. GERALD CHARLES GC SPORT CLAY Watchmaking deity Gerald Genta simply can’t stop giving, even beyond the grave. Cue another gamechanging dial shape with Maestro edges, this time with a sporty number in sepia shades and lightweight titanium. VACHERON CONSTANTIN OVERSEAS PERPETUAL CALENDAR ULTRA-THIN 41.5MM Whom do we need to speak to about a 2024 wall calendar in honour of this new VC? It’s just 8.1 millimetres thick, and it’ll show you the correct date until 2100. Museumworthy. 1 3 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
CARTIER PRIVÉ TANK NORMALE Trust the discreet maison of Cartier to downplay the seismic launch of this beautiful boxy bezel, with a cabochon on the winding crown and bevelled sapphire crystal. Normale? We think not. BREITLING PREMIER B01 CHRONOGRAPH 42MM Breitling has always had serious game in the air, but the original Premier from 1943 turned pilot watches from functional workhorses to style icons. The new cream-dial version only enhances its reputation. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 3 9
It’s been years since the rap legend released new music. Now, on his own creative terms, he’s unveiling his first solo project—and talking candidly about where he’s been, how he’s changed, and why he made an album that nobody could have expected. BY ZACH BARON PHOTOGRAPHS BY RENELL MEDRANO
FREE SPIRIT OF THE YEAR
was a kid, he used to get on his knees and recite what he called the Rapper’s Prayer, which was what it sounds like it was: Lord, we just want to be good rappers. Then he grew up a little and, with his friend Big Boi, who used to kneel and pray beside him, formed OutKast. OutKast turned out to be more than good—the group was great, among the greatest of all time. This year, the duo’s fifth album, 2003’s Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, was certified platinum for the 13th time, making it the best-selling rap album in history. André has been wrestling with the consequences of that childhood prayer ever since it was answered. “That’s life: You want what you want until you don’t want it,” he says, laughing a little. “I don’t regret any of that, but it’s kind of like now that I’m at a certain level, I miss certain things about normalcy.” That’s why he comes here, to this laundromat on the Westside of Los Angeles, not far from his house in Venice. One of the reasons, anyway. “It gives me a chance to be out in the world,” he says. (Another reason: The industrial washers and dryers are faster than the ones he has at home.) The other customers notice him but don’t recognize him, usually. “I’m older now, so a lot of people, they see me: ‘You look like him, but nah, that ain’t 3000.’ ” I am less than sure about this—very few people in human history have looked like André 3000, who at 48 still has the handsome face and lean-closer voice that he did when he was 19, and though his present daily uniform of overalls over a camouflage shirt is perhaps less flamboyant than what he wore during the height of his fame, it’s still overalls over a camouflage shirt. Plus, he usually carries a flute with him, to play in the alley out back while he waits. “I play everywhere,” he says. “If I’m waiting on a cup of coffee, if I’m just outside of my car— I take my flute pretty much everywhere I go.” Perhaps you’ve seen videos: André wandering an airport, or the streets of WHEN ANDRÉ 3000 1 4 2 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 Philadelphia, coaxing out eerie melodies from a variety of wooden instruments. In November, André will release his first new record since the last OutKast one, 2006’s Idlewild. It is called New Blue Sun. There is no rapping on it. There are, in fact, no identifiable vocals at all: It is a record built almost entirely around woodwind instruments, full of long, winding songs with long, winding titles. It’s a delicate, whimsical document—New Age music for an age that hasn’t quite dawned yet. André recorded it here in Venice, at a few different studios with a handful of other session musicians, last year. The recordings you hear are more or less improvisations: everyone’s first time through the song. Ask him why a woodwind album—and people do—and André 3000 will respond, characteristically, by asking, “Why anything? Why did we record these albums before in my career? It is just kind of: Those
GROOMING: IMAN THOMAS/DION PERONNEAU. PRODUCED BY ANNEE ELLIOT PRODUCTIONS, LOS ANGELES. LOCATION: WASH & DRY L AUNDROMAT, LOS ANGELES. are the things that came.” He is aware that people expect something else from him. Or: don’t expect. They want. Millions of people, in fact. They would like to hear him rap. It’s right there, acknowledged in the title of the first song on the record: “I swear, I Really Wanted To Make A ‘Rap’ Album But This Is Literally The Way The Wind Blew Me This Time”. And he did try, he says. “I’ve worked with some of the newest, freshest, youngest, and old-school producers. I get beats all the time. I try to write all the time.” But rap is not what comes. “Even now people think, Oh, man, he’s just sitting on raps, or he’s just holding these raps hostage. I ain’t got no raps like that. It actually feels…sometimes it feels inauthentic for me to rap because I don’t have anything to talk about in that way. I’m 48 years old. And not to say that age is a thing that dictates what you rap about, but in a way it does. And things that happen in my life, like, what are you talking about? ‘I got to go get a colonoscopy.’ What are you rapping about? ‘My eyesight is going bad.’ You can find cool ways to say it, but….” In his life, André 3000 has lost both parents. He’s sent a son off to college. He’s known loss and love and fame. He has a partner, in Big Boi, who would get back onstage with him tomorrow, to continue where OutKast left off, and every day André decides again not to do that. “And those are real subject matters. I jot down what’s going on in my life. But to make it into an entertaining song to where it’s just not self-serving or it’s not just—like there’s a part of entertaining someone else too.” He tries, but it’s not there when he looks for it. “And what’s that saying with recovering addicts? They say, ‘The longer I’m out of it, the better chances I have of staying out of it.’ ” In theory, André says, yes, the genre is big enough to encompass old age. To encompass colonoscopies and eye exams and grief and everything else. OutKast made their name expanding the possibilities of the genre, talking honestly about everything in their lives, good, bad, or indifferent. “But look at the greatest boxers now,” André says. “What D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 4 3
do they do? They do exhibition fights every now and then, but they’re not stepping in the ring. You know what I mean?” T H E R E I S A kind of mythic air that sometimes floats around André 3000, an affectionate but slightly dehumanizing impression that he is a whimsical sprite who emerges from time to time to practise mischief. Perhaps it’s worth saying that this is not at all how he sees himself. What he is, is sincere: He cannot help but do whatever he is compelled to do, even if it doesn’t make sense to anyone else. For instance: Why does he play his flute in public? Because he prefers practising to checking his phone. But then people film him, and those videos go viral, and it becomes something else, a competition to find and document whatever 1 4 4 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N André 3000 photographed at the Los Angeles laundromat he frequents. He’s come to appreciate the speed of the industrial dryers, plus, he says, “It gives me a chance to be out in the world.” 2 0 2 4 he’s up to in public. “It kind of made me more self-conscious,” he says. “Because it became kind of like a game.” But it is awesome, in any number of expected and unexpected ways, to spend time around the guy. In the laundromat, after his clothes are loaded in the washing machine, he hefts his flute, invites me to come hear him play it in the California sun, and so I spend a dazzling 15 minutes outside in an alley, listening to the quiet rush of nearby traffic and the hollow, playful sound of André finding his way through something new. On his overalls is a small drawing that he did of ants spiralling around a flute. This turns out to be the logo of the workwear brand he is developing, which he has decided to call From Now On, They Will Have No Choice But to Call Us The Ants. Increasingly, André says after we’ve gone back inside, this is what he’s up to: doing anything but making rap music. He is planning a store called A Myriad of Pyramids, which will sell clothes and artwork. Having built one immortal legacy with OutKast, he’s begun to think about others. “I’d like to make things that when I’m dead and gone 3,000 years from now, people may dig up and find. So if that’s sculpting, if that’s actually physical artwork, painting, designing instruments, that’s where I’m at right now.” In some ways, it was OutKast, in retrospect, that was the aberration in André 3000’s life, he says. “I’m almost going back and digging up something that I kind of abandoned before. Right before OutKast, I was supposed to go to art school.” André is compulsively honest, and eager to talk about just about anything; OutKast is the one subject that occasionally leaves him short of words. He thinks warmly about the early days of the group and has more complicated, harder to express thoughts about its pinnacle. What happened to him and Big Boi is still mostly a blur. “It happened so fast,” André says. “Sometimes I don’t even remember what cities we performed in.” At some point, the duo stopped playing shows, and then they stopped putting out records. In 2014, OutKast reunited for Coachella and an ensuing tour—André can still recall the first night, how strange it was, being back onstage, in front of thousands of people, not to mention Paul McCartney and Prince, who called the next day to reprimand André for checking out of the show, halfway through. “ ‘You know what your problem is?’ Prince asked. And I’m like, Fuck. He said, ‘You don’t realize how big y’all are.’ And then he was like, ‘You got to remind people who you are.’ And from that point on, I was like, Okay.” The shows went notably better from there. Still, OutKast hasn’t played a concert or released a song since. “There’s a certain chemistry that me and Big Boi had and have,” he says. “I think over time, people don’t understand that chemistry changes.” After the reunion, André went back to doing what he was comfortable doing, which was being on his own. Some people might struggle to figure out who they are, outside the group that made them famous, but it was more or less the opposite for André. “I mean, there’s been so many times in my mind where I thought I was done. So it wasn’t even a struggle. It wasn’t like, ‘What am I going to do now?’ Even during all of this, I remember a couple weeks ago talking to my manager and publicist, I really had to ask myself, ‘Do I want to be famous again?’ ” The answer was: no. “But at the same time, I want to promote the music.”
In the past, André 3000 has spoken openly about having social anxiety. “And it never goes away. It’s not like a cure-all kind of thing. It just becomes a part of life and you just have to take a deep breath, smile a little bit, and just get through it for tomorrow. That’s the best I can say.” But it’s also safe to say that fame and attention exacerbate the condition for him. He has never quite known what to do with the attention, with people filming him, coming up to him on the street. He has talked about this with a therapist, at times, how his gift lives so close to the thing that makes him unhappy. “He was like, ‘Well, son, the thing that makes your art what it is, is the thing that you don’t like either.’ So it’s like, Fuck, what am I going to do?” What are you going to do? “I don’t have a choice. It’s not like I can change it. Just kind of rock with it.” Well, I mean, I guess the dramatic version would be, “Oh, I’d give up the gift to get free.” “I’ve been through that too. But it’s not up to me.” New Blue Sun is many things, but one of those things is maybe an attempt to change the terms of the conversation. To—in a very André way—turn the game into an entirely different game. “I just think it’s a stepping stone,” he says. When expectations become suffocating, defy expectations. “I’ve played it for certain friends,” André says, “and depending on who they are, you get certain reactions. So I know that’s how the world will react too. But it’s all positive. It’s kind of like: You may get someone that cries. You may get someone that immediately starts to do yoga. You may get someone that goes “I get beats all the time. I try to write all the time. People think, Oh, man, he’s just sitting on raps, or he’s just holding these raps hostage. I ain’t got no raps like that.” to sleep. Then you got the homie that be like, ‘Y’all gon’ put some beats on that shit?’ You get it all, man.” André says he is used to his friends not always liking his music. Once, he says, he played “Hey Ya” for someone close to him. “He said, ‘Man, if you put that out, your career is over.’ In my mind, I’m like, ‘Damn. But I like this shit!’ So I like to get different opinions. I’m never unaware. I’m never oblivious. And I’m always aware of how people will take it.” But he also can’t help but do what he wants to do, even if it’s not what other people want him to do. New Blue Sun is not intended to be a provocation—if anything, it’s the opposite; it’s an attempt to connect, to narrow the distance between the massive, abstract legacy of OutKast and the more humble, daily reality of André 3000. But it’s certainly not what people are anticipating. “It could end right here,” André says. “But then that might be a blessing too. I’d be all right. I’d know that, man, you put your time in and did what you wanted to do. That’s all you can ask for. It’s like, I’m not tripping. I mean, I’ll go and draw and paint or something.” ZACH BARON is GQ ’s senior special projects editor. D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 4 5
The products featured editorially have been ordered from the following stores. Prices and availability were checked at the time of going to press. # 42 Suns mrporter.com 4SDesigns 4sdesigns.com A A&S aands.co.in Akila akila.la Anamika Khanna Mumbai, 85910 02932; Delhi, 95603 37744 Anna Karlin annakarlin.com Apple Mumbai, 80004 04504; Delhi, 80000 404503 Ashish Soni Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4606 0955 Audemars Piguet Delhi, Kapoor Watch Co, 011-4134 5678 B Balenciaga Mumbai, 022-3516 8704 Bode bodenewyork.com Boss Mumbai, Palladium, 022-2491 2210; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4604 0773; Bengaluru, UB City, 080-4122 1802 Bottega Veneta Mumbai, Palladium 022-6615 2291; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4609 8262 Bulgari Mumbai, 022-3550 3323; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4053 8624 C Charles & Keith Mumbai, 74200 20352; Delhi, 74200 20339; Bangalore, 74200 20347 Chopova Lowena chopovalowena.com Christian Louboutin Mumbai, 022-4347 1787; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4101 7111 Coach Mumbai, Palladium 022-2491 2210; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4927 0626; Bengaluru, 080-48651744 Countrymade countrymade.in D David Yurman davidyurman.com Dhruv Kapoor dhruvkapoor.com Dior Men Mumbai, 80005 03807; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4600 5900 Dries Van Noten driesvannoten.be E Editions Milano editionsmilano.com Ernest W Baker ernest-w-baker.com F Ferragamo Mumbai, 022-3062 1018; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4660 9084; Bengaluru, UB City, 080-4302 0456 1 4 6 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N G Gentle Monster gentlemonster.com Givenchy givenchy.com Gucci Mumbai, 022-6747 7060; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4647 1111 H Hermès Mumbai, 022-2271 7400; Delhi, 011-2688 5501 Hulken hulkenbag.com I Isabel Marant isabelmarant.com Ishhaara ishhaara.com K KGL Delhi, 011-6555 7775 Khanijo Delhi, 011-4054 6546 Kimeze kimeze.com L Lalo lalo.com Loewe loewe.com Longines Mumbai, Watches of Switzerland, 022-2640 2511; Delhi, 011-4359 2848; Bengaluru, Ethos, 080-4113 0611 Louis Vuitton Mumbai, 022-6664 4134; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4669 0000; Bengaluru, UB City, 080-4246 0000 M Mannat Gupta mannatgupta.com MARGN margn.in Massimo Dutti Mumbai, Palladium, 022-6237 0731; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-0259 5333 Medea medea.world Mercedes-Benz Mumbai, MB Auto Hangar, 022-6612 3800; Delhi, T&T Motors, 011-4005 8300; Bengaluru, Akshaya Motors, 91085 35297 MoMa Design Store store.moma.org Moschino moschino.com Movado movado.com O Omega Mumbai, 022-6655 0351; Delhi, 011-4151 3255; Bengaluru, 080-4098 2106 P Polo Ralph Lauren Available at The Collective Prada prada.com R Radhika Agrawal rajewels.in 2 0 2 4 Rahul Mishra Delhi, 96500 39960; Mumbai, 93267 88526 Rajesh Pratap Singh Mumbai, 022-6638 5480; Delhi, 011-2463 8788 Rimowa Mumbai, 022-3500 2907 Rimzim Dadu Delhi, 97179 45460 Rohit Gandhi + Rahul Khanna Delhi, 011-4663 2636 Thom Browne thombrowne.com Tiffany & Co. Delhi, 93548 47531 Tom Ford Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4103 3059 Troy Costa Mumbai, 98200 71069 Tsu Lange Yor tsu-lange-yor.com S Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello Delhi, The Chanakya, 78771 23123 Selected Homme Mumbai, Palladium, 022-4333 9994; Delhi, 011-4152 3006; Bengaluru, 080-4204 3753 Song For The Mute songforthemute.com Stóffa stoffa.co Supreme us.supreme.com U Uniqlo Delhi, 011-4087 0760; Mumbai, 022-6925 3800 Ura wearura.com T T.Henri thenri.com The Collective Mumbai, Palladium, 022-4023 4414; Delhi, 011-4087 0544; Bengaluru, UB City, 080-4120 7331 V Valentino Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4446 8659 Y Yew Yew yewyewshop.com Z Zara Mumbai, 022-4542 1800; Delhi, DLF Promenade, 011-4513 7124; Bengaluru, Phoenix Marketcity, 080-6726 6121 Zegna Mumbai, Palladium, 022-4347 1263; Delhi, DLF Emporio, 011-4606 0999 Coat, waistcoat, and trousers by Anamika Khanna. PHOTOGR APH: SAHIL BEHAL . ST YLING: SELMAN FA ZIL . HAIR: MOHD JAVED. MAKE-UP: SANJAY YADAV. ENTERTAINMENT DIRECTOR: MEGHA MEHTA. PRODUCTION: ANOMALY PRODUCTION, SHUBHR A SHUKL A. WHERE TO BUY
PHOTO: BIKRAMJIT BOSE/VOGUE INDIA BEFORE IT’S IN FASHION, IT’S IN VOGUE!
GQ Top Shelf Fashion, Grooming and Luxury in standout style Elevating Your Bath Space In Pursuit Of Excellence A tasteful blend of form and function, Rainbeam by Artize is a tiltable shower head and a lightweight hand shower that lets you enjoy indulgent showers at their finest. Crafted to perfection, this shower head features an exquisite tactile surface with a pattern of truncated pyramidal nozzles that deliver water as streaming jets of raindrops. The Rainbeam lets you transform your showers into a wellness session with showers that feel like a toning massage. Available in an array of colour finishes, the Rainbeam seamlessly suits your bath interiors. For those seeking a sensory indulgence in the shower, Rainbeam by Artize is the perfect addition for elevating bath spaces. As the official sponsor of the Italian Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli sailing team, Panerai introduces new timepieces to the Luna Rossa collection inspired by the technical innovation, the majestic beauty and resilience of the yachting world. The new pieces feature novel creatives inspired by Luna Rossa’s boat materials and aesthetic codes with a diverse appeal for all genders. This new partnership focuses on aquatic adventure watches with passion-driven research for advancement. For more information, visit artize.com For more information, visit panerai.com Conquering Frizz Sky Is The Limit Banking At Your Fingertips Breaking the glass ceiling of haircare with cutting-edge products, Schwarzkopf Professional holds a worldwide leading position. And its genius, OSiS+, is taming frizz and replacing it with lustrous hair, with OSiS Glow. The lightweight, anti-frizz shine serum with a non-overburdening formula combats rough hair while controlling frizz and flyaways, leaving shiny, manageable hair. The longest-running line produced by the manufacturer, the ZENITH Pilot collection, never fails to captivate both die-hard aviation fanatics and seasoned watch enthusiasts. The Pilot Big Date Flyback Steel version has the most distinguished El Primero Flyback chronographs – aptly named “Rainbow Flyback.’’ This watch is a new version, with a host of unparalleled functions. The IDFC FIRST Bank offers hassle-free banking processes with unlimited benefits on their IDFC FIRST Bank’s FIRST WOW! Credit Card. This banking pioneer’s credit card presents exciting benefits of VISA Infinite and up to 4X reward points that never expire. Pairing this with the variety of exciting, financial gains offered by the bank like making foreign currency transactions with zero mark-up. Whether you’re travelling abroad or making online purchases, this credit card lets you enjoy the best in banking with their wide range of advantages. For more information, visit nykaa.com For more information visit zenith-watches.com For more information, visit idfcfirstbank.com 1 4 8 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
Redefining The Art Of Travel Symphony Of Luxe Workmanship Samsonite unveils ‘Destination Samsonite: Voyage Through Time’. Launched in Singapore in the presence of notable guests including CEO Kyle Francis Gendreau, this exhibition paid homage to the brand’s evolution. The event featured the brand’s transition to smart travel solutions and their iconic products. Samsonite also released three new products – Evoa Z, SBL Major-Lite, and New Streamlite that present a confluence of form and function. Indulge in the timeless beauty of elegant craftsmanship of fine writing and luxury accessories. The Contemporary Bordeaux Ballpoint Pen is sculpted from light-weight metal, featuring a deep claret lacquer coating, inspired by famous wine from the region, and is accentuated with distinguished gold trims. The Ducorium Bordeaux Wallet houses a removable bifold with mesh ID windows and card slots. The wallet is crafted from exquisite leather and draws inspiration from sfumato, the Renaissance technique, where hand-painted edges are used to create a dual tone that gradually darkens, showing imperceptible transition between shades. For more information, visit samsonite.in For more information, visit lapisbard.com A Celestial Masterpiece Inspired by the lifecycle of a star, Titan’s latest collection – Titan Stellar unfolds the story of the universe. The collection features 11 captivating variants and 3 limited edition watches that combine technical mastery and captivating storytelling. Watches inspired by three stages of a star’s life cycle are meticulously designed to present unique nuances that are a representation of the specific stage within this celestial cycle. A notable timepiece from this collection is The Meteorite watch, featuring a dial crafted with authentic muonionalusta iron meteorite. For more information, visit titan.co.in The Connoisseurs Of Leather No More Cleaning Woes In the realm of men’s fashion, the significance of footwear cannot be overstated. With 75 years of thriving legacy, H&S Craftsmanship offers an exquisite collection of customised handmade premium leather products that transcend beyond mere footwear. Elevate your everyday style with confidence and sophistication at H&S. Washing and drying quilts at home can be time-consuming and might spoil the quilt if not done correctly. Pressto knows how to properly care for your quilts, whether it’s removing an old spot or simply giving it a wash to restore its freshness. That is why you should leave it to the professionals. Trusting Pressto with your quilts saves you time and effort while also guaranteeing that they are cared for with the utmost expertise and attention to detail. Bring your quilts and blankets to be Pressto-ed and receive a 25% discount. The offer is valid from December 1, 2023 to February 29, 2024. So you can enjoy your beauty sleep. For more information, visit hnscraftsmanship.com For more information, visit presstoindia.com or call 9167188355 D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4 G Q 1 4 9
GQ World Humour Dating Prospects as Insects B y ARIELL A ELOVIC 1 5 0 G Q D E C 2 0 2 3 - J A N 2 0 2 4
IT'S WHAT'S NEW NOW PHOTO: TARUN VISHWA/GQ INDIA
WHAT A MAN'S GOT TO DO PHOTO: R BURMAN/GQ INDIA